BEIJING, July 15 (Xinhua) -- A total of 1,288
traditional Thangka paintings, which follow the epic tale of Tibetan hero
"Gesar", will be shown here from July 30 to Aug. 20 as a key program for the
Olympic Culture Festival.
The artwork series, which depicts the Life of King
Gesar, a Tibetan heroic tale and the world's longest epic that has been
transmitted orally by ballad singers or lyricists for centuries, took more than
100 Tibetan folk painters five years to finish.
With more than 32 million yuan (4.57 million U.S.
dollars) investment from Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture and other civilian
funds, the paintings are said to be the biggest Thangka art project in the world
in terms of scale and technique.
Each painting is two-meter long and 1.4-meter wide,
and underwent eight hand-made processes, including gold outlining and brocade
mounting.
"Ganzi is King Gesar's hometown. The artwork reflects
our traditional ethnic culture and contributes its own beauty for the Olympics,"
said Li Changping, head of Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture.
Li said following the exhibition in Beijing, the
paintings will begin a global tour in Asia, Europe, North America and other
places.
Academic research organizations in Tibet have visited
57 local ballad singers who were able to sing the epic and made 5,000 hours of
recording. It is said that more new artists are able to sing the epic.
With the help of the Tibet Academy of Social
Sciences, 86-year-old Samzhub, one of China's 150-odd surviving King Gesar
ballad singers, has completed verbatim recording of 45 episodes of the epic and
30 publications in the country's three-decade campaign to preserve the
1-million-line, 1,000-year-old Tibetan epic.
"Samzhub's version, including opening, ending and
many important stories, is comparatively intact. It's a historic record for an
artist to sing 'Gesar' from stem to stem all by himself," said Cering Puncog,
vice director of the Ethnic Institute under the academy.
In addition, the country's local academy
organizations are stepping up their recording and publication work for "Gesar"
in Qinghai, Sichuan, Yunnan, Gansu, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.