| Tibet Rock
Painting Rock Paintings in Tibet Zhang Yasha Rock Paintings
in China
Rock paintings in China can be divided into southern and northern
schools. Southern school rock paintings depict mainly religious rituals and
are painted in red. They are distributed in an area from southwest to south China.
Northern school rock paintings, carved into rocks, show hunting activities
in north China. They are distributed in an area from the northeast to northwest
and southwest. The part from northeast to southwest China extends from Heilongjiang
to Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Gansu, Qinghai, Xinjiang and Tibet. Once in Inner
Mongolia,  | | Leopard
Chases Dear:Carved rock painting in Renmodong |
the rock paintings
moved northwestward in two ways: one way connected with Central Asia via Altaishan,
Tianshan and Kunlunshan Mountains, and the Pamir Plateau; the other way linked
up with Central Asia via Yingshan, Helanshan and Qilianshan Mountains, and the
Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. When rock paintings entered the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau,
they did not exclusively follow the road to Central Asia. Instead, they moved
across northern and western Tibet, and began to move southward in Changtang to
meet those from northwest Sichuan and northwest Yunnan. Rock paintings in
Tibet belong to the northern school. So far as themes are concerned, they depict
hunting and religious rituals. When rock paintings were created in
ancient Tibet, their creators not intend to record what had happened or were happening
then: tribal production, wars and religious rituals.  | |
Painted drawings on a rock at Zhaxi island,Namco Lake,northern Tibet |
DISTRIBUTION.
Incomplete statistics show there are more than 5,000 rock paintings at some
60 sites in 14 counties in Tibet. They are mostly distributed in western and northern
Tibet and the plateau area on the middle and upper reaches of the Yarlung Zangbo
River, which is what we call the Changtang (meaning grasslands in Tibetan). Changtang
covers an area 2,400 km long and 700 km wide, with an elevation averaging over
4,500 meters. Rock paintings are concentrated mainly in Ngari and Nagqu. Rock
paintings in the western part were carved into rocks, and a small number of these
are painted in red. They are distributed mainly in Ritog County, with major sites
remaining along the Tibet-Xinjiang Highway. In ancient times, this part of the
world was a major passageway to Kashmir, Central Asia and the Western Regions.
 | Yaks:Rock
painting at Yanhu |
Rock paintings in Ritog reveal
the fact that the area used to be home to a variety of ethnic tribes. In the Leopard
Chases Deer, the deer is elegantly decorated with an inverted "S" or
whorl patterns, displaying the Euro-Asian grassland ethnic art style in the north.
 | Yaks:Rock
painting |
Rock paintings in western Tibet depict
local activities. Worshipping With Blood found in Renmudong, Migration or Transportation
found in Khamba, Sorcerers, with hairs all over and decorated with feathers in
the head, found in Luri Namka, Organized Hunting or Herding, and Sacrificial Rituals
all show that western Tibet was unbelievably prosperous for a considerably prolonged
period of time in history. Rock paintings were highly likely to be connected with
the Zhangzhung Culture in central or western Tibet, showing its strong presence
at the time. Rock paintings in northern Tibet are represented by those in
Gyialing Mountain and dwelling cave rock paintings by Nam Co Lake. A large rock
painting complex at Gyialing Mountain is mentioned by locals as "holy painting".
On the 50-plus pieces of rocks are carved animals, people, trees and symbols,
displaying hunting, taming animals, herding and fighting activities.
 | | Yak
Fighting:Rick painting at Gyialing Mountain in north Tibet |
Dwelling
cave rock paintings by the Nam Co Lake (including those in Qido Mountain and Zhaxi
Island on its western bank) contain the content of Buddhist culture, showing they
are later than those in Gyialing Mountain and western Tibet. A few rock paintings
by the Nam Co Lake were painted colorfully, describing hunting, fighting and dancing.
They contain many symbols related to Buddhism and Buddhist rituals such as sacrificial
ones.
 | Yaks:Rock
painting at Yanhu |
PERIODS. Earliest rock
paintings were found to be 3,000 years old. They include those in Gyialing Mountain
in northern Tibet and Alung Gully in western Tibet. Other rock paintings date
from a period 3,000-2,000 years ago; they are concentrated in the western part
of Tibet. Rock paintings of the later generation are represented by those found
in dwelling caves on the bank of the Nam Co Lake in northern Tibet; they were
most likely created during the Tubo Kingdom.  | | Tree
Worshiping:Rock painting at Qugarchang,Ritog,Ngari. |
Yaks
stand conspicuously in what are described in rock paintings in Tibet, largely
because yaks were much used for transportation purposes and were vital to Tibetan
livelihood. As a kind of art form, however, rock paintings exaggerated the animals,
especially in their back and horns. In some cases, the body of a yak was carved
into the rock, with a large tail and small head, and highlighted by short yet
strong legs. Their horns bend 180 degrees or even 360 degrees.
 | | Yaks:Rock
painting at Takang-ma and Nabulung in western Tibet.(The three above are rock
painting in Takangma,and others below at Nabulung) |
Rock
paintings created in later period were not all chiseled out. The yak body becomes
longer and comparatively thinner, with a small and pointed head. They adopt a
running stance. Such rock paintings are found mainly in the western part of Tibet,
mostly in Takaamba and Renmodong. There are also yaks with rectangular-shaped
body, small head, bent horn, and arched back. A salient feature is long, drooping
hair on the belly. Though such yaks do not impress viewers with their running
stance as seen in other rock paintings, their giant belly with drooping hair catches
the viewers' attention. What is most interesting is that they bear symbols of
the sun, the moon or the swastika.
SWASTIKA.
Swastika is the
second most representative pattern in rock paintings in Tibet. Such a symbol appeared
during the Tubo period when Buddhism had made its way into the region. It could
be found in rock paintings of various stages in western, northern and southern
Tibet. Generally speaking, in rock paintings, the swastika does not exist
independently. It co-exists with other objects, including the sun, the moon, trees,
certain animals (very often being placed on giant, fat yaks), sorcerers, banners
or patterns representing dwelling tents, and some circles. This shows the swastika
was closely related to production and life, and religious rituals. What is hard
to understand is its association with trees. In the Tibetan Plateau, trees were
hardly seen at high altitude. Very often, trees are seen in rock paintings covering
an area of hundreds of square km, where no trees could be found. What does tree
mean in the rock paintings? No matter what is the answer, the fact is that tree
held an important position in the minds of those who created these rock paintings.
There are historical records that describe a God Tree in western Ngari, Tibet.
There, people paid sacrifices to the God Tree. As a matter of fact, the Tibetans
worshiped trees in their daily life. |