Thangka became a Tibetan painting art, thanks to the meticulous creation of Tibetan artists.
Legend has it that when Master Zong Kaba, the founder of Gelug Sect, entered Tibet, the local people begged him to leave some instructions. The master said that you don't have enough brains to study classics. Give you a pen and learn to draw. Later, really every family can draw. Local people say that this is the means of livelihood and spiritual wealth left by Master Zong Kaba.
Wipe, it is a small Buddha statue or pagoda made of mud demoulding. The big one is a foot, embedded in the temple wall.
According to ancient records, Milarepa wiped the ashes and dirt of her respected mother after her death. The most precious rubbings are often made from the remains and ashes of masters and placed in the towers of many Tibetan Buddhist temples.
Tibetan opera is the crystallization of thousands of years of cultural wisdom of Tibetan people, which originated more than 600 years ago and is known as the "living fossil" of Tibetan culture.
Music, art (mask) and dance are used to express literary content. The early stories were all Buddhist stories, and later they developed, but they were still inseparable from the Buddhist connotation.