BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:icalendar-ruby
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-WR-CALNAME: Gateway to Himalayan Art
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Pacific Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726732870
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260221
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726733895
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260222
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726734920
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260223
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726734921
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260224
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726735946
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260225
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726736971
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260226
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726736972
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260227
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726737997
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260228
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726739022
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260301
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726739023
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260302
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726740048
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260303
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726741073
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260304
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726741074
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260305
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726742099
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260306
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726743124
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260307
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726743125
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260308
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726744150
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260309
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726745175
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260310
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726745176
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260311
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726746201
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260312
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726746202
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260313
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726747227
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260314
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726748252
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260315
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726748253
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260316
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726749278
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260317
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726750303
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260318
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060940Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726750304
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260319
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726751329
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260320
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726752354
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260321
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726752355
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260322
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726753380
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260323
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726754405
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260324
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726754406
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260325
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726755431
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260326
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726756456
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260327
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726756457
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260328
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726757482
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260329
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726758507
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260330
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726758508
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260331
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726759533
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260401
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726759534
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260402
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726760559
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260403
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726761584
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260404
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726762609
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260405
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726762610
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260406
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726763635
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260407
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726764660
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260408
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726764661
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260409
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726765686
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260410
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726766711
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260411
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726766712
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260412
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726767737
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260413
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726768762
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260414
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726768763
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260415
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726769788
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260416
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726770813
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260417
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726770814
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260418
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726771839
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260419
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726772864
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260420
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726772865
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260421
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726773890
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260422
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726774915
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260423
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726774916
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260424
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726775941
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260425
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726776966
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260426
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726776967
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260427
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726777992
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260428
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726779017
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260429
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726779018
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260430
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726780043
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260501
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726781068
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260502
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726781069
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260503
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726782094
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260504
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726783119
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260505
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726783120
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260506
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726784145
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260507
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726785170
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260508
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726785171
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260509
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726786196
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260510
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726787221
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260511
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726787222
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260512
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726788247
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260513
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726789272
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260514
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726789273
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260515
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726790298
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260516
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726791323
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260517
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726792348
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260518
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726792349
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260519
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726793374
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260520
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726794399
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260521
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726794400
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260522
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726795425
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260523
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726796450
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260524
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726796451
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260525
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726797476
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260526
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726798501
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260527
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726798502
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260528
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726799527
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260529
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726799528
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260530
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726800553
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260531
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726801578
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260601
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726801579
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260602
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726802604
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260603
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726803629
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260604
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726803630
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260605
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726804655
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260606
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726805680
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260607
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726805681
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260608
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726806706
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260609
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726807731
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260610
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726808756
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260611
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726808757
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260612
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726809782
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260613
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726810807
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260614
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726810808
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260615
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726811833
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260616
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726812858
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260617
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726812859
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260618
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726813884
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260619
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726814909
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260620
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726814910
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260621
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726815935
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260622
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726815936
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260623
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726822081
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260624
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726823106
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260625
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060941Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726824131
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260626
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060942Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726825156
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260627
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060942Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726825157
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260628
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060942Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726826182
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260629
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060942Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726827207
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260630
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060942Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726828232
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260701
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060942Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726829257
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260702
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060942Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726830282
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260703
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060942Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726831307
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260704
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T060942Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52649726831308
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260705
DESCRIPTION:Gateway to Himalayan Art is a special exhibition that introduce
 s the main forms\, concepts\, meanings\, and living traditions of Himalaya
 n art. The exhibition features sublime religious art created from the 13th
  through the 21st centuries in Tibet\, Nepal\, China\, and Mongolia\, draw
 n from the permanent collection of the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art\, whi
 ch organized the exhibition. \n\nAt the start of the exhibition\, a multim
 edia map orients visitors to the greater Himalayan region\, which encompas
 ses Indian\, Nepalese\, Bhutanese\, and Tibetan cultures as well as interr
 elated Mongolian and Chinese traditions. Gateway to Himalayan Art invites 
 exploration of these diverse cultural spheres through exemplary objects pr
 esented in three thematic sections: Symbols and Meanings\, Materials and T
 echnologies\, and Living Practices. Traditional scroll paintings (thangkas
 )\, sculptures in various media\, and ritual items comprise the diverse ra
 nge of objects on view. \n\nExhibition Thematic Sections\n\nThe Symbols an
 d Meanings section juxtaposes paintings and sculptures to introduce the ic
 onography of Buddhas and bodhisattvas\; Tantric\, female\, and wrathful de
 ities\; Hindu gods and goddesses\; and spiritually accomplished humans suc
 h as arhats\, Mahasiddhas\, and great religious teachers (lamas).\n\nThe M
 aterials and Technologies section features in-depth displays detailing the
  making of a Tibetan thangka painting\, the process of Nepalese lost-wax m
 etal casting\, the creation of clay\, wood\, and stone sculptures\, and th
 e fabrication of manuscripts and printed texts and images. It is augmented
  with artists’ tools and materials\, and videos.\n\nThe section on Livin
 g Practices uses paintings\, sculptures\, ritual implements\, and medical 
 instruments to explore sacred rituals undertaken by Buddhists to accrue sp
 iritual merit and achieve secular aims. It also introduces traditions of n
 arrative and instructive Buddhist paintings and concludes with an elaborat
 e wooden shrine housing sacred images\, texts\, and ritual objects to enco
 urage visitors to consider the original context of the kinds of devotional
  art featured in the exhibition.\n\nThis traveling exhibition is organized
  and provided by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and curated by Senior C
 urator of Himalayan Art Elena Pakhoutova. Gateway to Himalayan Art is an i
 ntegral component of the Rubin Museum’s Project Himalayan Art\, a three-
 part initiative that also includes the publication Himalayan Art in 108 Ob
 jects and a digital platform. Together they provide introductory resources
  for learning about and teaching Himalayan art.\n\nIn addition to introduc
 ing an astonishing array of beautiful and meaningful works of art\, Gatewa
 y to Himalayan Art includes informative videos explaining a variety of rel
 igious\, cultural\, and artistic practices\, audio recordings from Himalay
 an communities that highlight living traditions\, and opportunities to div
 e deeper into the rich contextual material available on the Rubin’s inte
 grated digital platform.\n\nIn conjunction with the JSMA’s presentation 
 of Gateway to Himalayan Art\, the Rubin is generously lending two addition
 al global contemporary works by Shraddha Shrestha and Tsherin Sherpa that 
 include elements from traditional Himalayan Buddhist art to welcome visito
 rs in the museum lobby.\n\nGateway to Himalayan Art has already been shown
  at the Lehigh University Art Galleries in Bethlehem\, Pennsylvania\, and 
 the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College in 2023\; the Harn Museum of 
 Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville and the Frank Museum of Ar
 t at Otterbein University in Westerville\, Ohio\, in 2024\; and the Utah M
 useum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and the Fla
 ten Art Museum at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, in 2025. Af
 ter it closes at the JSMA\, the exhibition will travel to the USC Pacific 
 Asia Museum at the University of Southern California in Pasadena.\n\nThe R
 ubin recently transitioned to being a “museum without walls\,” sharing
  its collection and expertise through traveling exhibitions\, object loans
 \, grant opportunities\, and partnerships with the goal of encouraging und
 erstanding and appreciation of Himalayan art worldwide.
GEO:44.044315;-123.076986
LOCATION:Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)\, Barker Gallery
SUMMARY: Gateway to Himalayan Art
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/gateway-to-himalayan-art
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
CATEGORIES:Art
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