Glimpses of the Lost World of Alchi
Threatened Buddhist art at a 900-year-old monastery high in the Indian Himalayas sheds light on a fabled civilization
- By Jeremy Kahn
- Photographs by Aditya Arya
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
Getting here entails flying from New Delhi to the town of Leh, sited at an altitude of more than 11,000 feet, followed by a 90-minute drive along the Indus River valley. The journey takes you past the camouflaged barracks of Indian Army bases, past the spot where the blue waters of the Zanskar River mingle with the Indus’ mighty green and past a 16th-century fort built into cliffs above the town of Basgo. Finally, you cross a small trellis bridge suspended above the Indus. A sign hangs over the road: “The model village of Alchi.”
Several hundred inhabitants live in traditional mud and thatch houses. Many women wearing customary Ladakhi pleated robes (gonchas), brocaded silk capes and felt hats work in the barley fields and apricot groves. A dozen or so guesthouses have sprung up to cater to tourists.
Alchi’s status as a backwater, located on the opposite bank of the Indus from the routes invading armies traveled in the past and commercial truckers use today, has helped preserve the murals. “It is a kind of benign neglect,” says Nawang Tsering, head of the Central Institute of Buddhist Studies, based in Leh. “Alchi was too small, so [the invaders] didn’t touch it. All the monasteries along the highway were looted hundreds of times, but Alchi nobody touched.”
Although Alchi’s existence is popularly attributed to Rinchen Zangpo, a translator who helped promulgate Buddhism throughout Tibet in the early 11th century, most scholars believe the monastic complex was founded nearly a century later by Kalden Sherab and Tshulthim O, Buddhist priests from the region’s powerful Dro clan. Sherab studied at Nyarma Monastery (which Zangpo had founded), where, according to an inscription in Alchi’s prayer hall, “like a bee, he gathered the essence of wise men’s thoughts, which were filled with virtue as a flower is with nectar.” As a member of a wealthy clan, Sherab likely commissioned the artists who painted Alchi’s oldest murals.
Who were these artists? The Dukhang, or Assembly Hall, contains a series of scenes depicting nobles hunting and feasting at a banquet. Their dress—turbans and tunics adorned with lions—and braided hair appear Central Asian, perhaps Persian. The colors and style of painting are not typically Tibetan. Rather, they seem influenced by techniques from as far west as Byzantium. The iconography found in some of the Alchi murals is also highly unusual, as is the depiction of palm trees, not found within hundreds of miles. And there are the geometric patterns painted on the ceiling beams of the Sumtsek (three-tiered) temple, which scholars suspect were modeled on textiles.
Many scholars theorize that the creators of the Alchi murals were from the Kashmir Valley in the west, a 300-mile journey. And though the temple complex was Buddhist, the artists themselves may have been Hindus, Jains or Muslims. This might explain the murals’ arabesques, a design element associated with Islamic art, or why people depicted in profile are painted with a protruding second eye, a motif found in illuminated Jain manuscripts. To reach Alchi, the Kashmiris would have journeyed for weeks on foot through treacherous mountain passes. Because of stylistic similarities, it is thought that the same troupe of artists may have painted murals in other monasteries in the region.
If the artists were Kashmiri, Alchi’s importance would be even greater. In the eighth and ninth centuries, Kashmir emerged as a center of Buddhist learning, attracting monks from throughout Asia. Though Kashmir’s rulers soon reverted to Hinduism, they continued to tolerate Buddhist religious schools. By the late ninth and tenth centuries, an artistic renaissance was underway in the kingdom, fusing traditions of East and West and borrowing elements from many religious traditions. But few artifacts from this remarkably cosmopolitan period survived Kashmir’s Islamic sultanate in the late 14th century and the subsequent 16th-century Mogul conquest of the valley.
Alchi may provide crucial details about this lost world. For instance, the dhoti on one colossal statue—the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, who embodies compassion—is decorated with unknown temples and palaces. British anthropologist David Snellgrove and German art historian Roger Goepper have postulated that the images depict actual places in Kashmir—either ancient pilgrimage sites or contemporary buildings the artists knew. Because no large Kashmiri wooden structures from this period survive, Avalokiteshvara’s dhoti may provide our only glimpse of the architecture of 12th-century Kashmir. Similarly, if the patterns painted on the Sumtsek beams are in fact designed to mimic cloth, they may constitute a veritable catalog of medieval Kashmiri textiles, of which almost no actual examples have been preserved.
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Related topics: Painting Photographers Renovation and Restoration India Places of Worship
Additional Sources
Alchi, Ladakh’s Hidden Buddhist Sanctuary by Roger Goepper and Jaroslav Poncar, Shambhala Limited Editions, 1996
Marvels of Buddhist Art: Alchi-Ladakh by Pratapaditya Pal, Ravi Kumar Publishers, 1988
Alchi: The Living Heritage of Ladakh by Central Institute of Buddhist Studies, Leh-Ladakh, 2009









Comments (2)
Dated:- September 21, 2010.
Dear Mr, Jeremy,
It was chance to get on the net and found your column which is quite interesting to read. It will be an eye opener to the people of Ladakh and also will induce a sense of enthuism and interest in the younger generation towards the value of thier history and culture if the magazine could have available in Ladakh. The people will know the ideas of the people residing out side Ladakh how they have much interest and sympathy with the dying heritages of Ladakh.
More and more such columns shall be appreciated regarding the conservation of Ladakh rich cultural heritages to let the people understand thier own responsibility of its protection otherwise the day is not far when everything will be lost and Ladakh will really be a forbidden land and all the developmental activities aims at boosting tourism will be useless.
The suffering will not be other people of the world , but the people of Ladakh themselves wgich must be think upon by all.
Thanks
Regards
Posted by Tsering Angchok Secretary, Basgo Welfare Committee on September 21,2010 | 06:26 AM
Unfortunately some of the fears of the ASI have been confirmed. Some of the restorations done in one of the minor temples in the complex looks positively cartoonish and is said to be the work of the Likkir monks themselves. Elsewhere is Ladakh, at the Hemis Monastery, old paintings are being restored using regular poster paint. It is shocking at the dis-regard the monks have for their own heritage.
Posted by Anant Raina on August 10,2010 | 12:06 AM