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 3 of 5)
Researchers aren’t sure why the temples were built facing southeast, when Buddhist temples customarily face east, as the Buddha was said to have done when he found enlightenment. Nor is it known why the image of the Buddhist goddess Tara—a green-skinned, many-armed protector—was accorded such prominence in the Sumtsek paintings. Much about Alchi remains baffling.
Although it is late spring, a numbing chill pervades Alchi’s Assembly Hall. Standing in its dark interior, Arya lights a small stick of incense and makes two circuits around the room before placing the smoldering wand on a small altar. Only after performing this purification ritual does he return to his camera. Arya is Hindu, though not “a hard-core believer,” he says. “I must have done something seriously good in my past life, or seriously bad, because I wind up spending so much of my life in these temples.”
He first came to Ladakh in 1977, to explore the mountains, shortly after tourists were first permitted to travel here. He later led treks through the area as a guide and photographer for a California-based adventure travel outfit.
For this assignment, he has brought an ultra-large-format digital camera that can capture an entire mandala, a geometric painting meant to depict the universe, in exquisite detail. His studio lights, equipped with umbrella-shaped diffusers to avoid damaging the paintings, are powered by a generator at a nearby guesthouse; the cord runs from the house down a narrow, dirt lane to the monastery. When the generator fails—as it often does—Arya and his two assistants are plunged into darkness. Their faces illuminated only by the glow of Arya’s battery-powered laptop computer, they look like ghosts from a Tibetan fable.
But when the studio lights are working, they cast a golden glow on the Assembly Hall’s mandalas, revealing stunning details and colors: the skeletal forms of Indian ascetics, winged chimeras, multi-armed gods and goddesses, and nobles on horseback hunting lions and tigers. Sometimes these details astound even Alchi’s caretaker monk, who says he has never noticed these facets of the paintings before.
The concern about conserving Alchi’s murals and buildings is nothing new. “A project for renovation and maintenance appears to be urgently called for,” Goepper wrote in 1984. Little has changed.
In 1990, Goepper, photographer Jaroslav Poncar and art conservators from Cologne, Germany, launched the Save Alchi Project. They catalogued damage to its paintings and temple buildings—some portions of which were even then in danger of collapsing—and began restoration work in 1992. But the project ended two years later, the victim, Goepper wrote, of what he termed “growing confusion over administrative responsibility.” Or, say others, between religious and national interests.
Although tourists now far outnumber worshipers, Alchi is still a living temple under religious control of the nearby Likir Monastery, currently headed by the Dalai Lama’s younger brother, Tenzin Choegyal. Monks from Likir serve as Alchi’s caretakers, collecting entrance fees and enforcing a prohibition on photography inside the temples. (Arya has special permission.) At the same time, responsibility for preserving Alchi as a historic site rests with the government’s Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).
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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