Glenn Mullin Glenn Mullin Glenn Mullin
Glenn Mullin Glenn Mullin Glenn Mullin Glenn Mullin
Glenn Mullin Glenn Mullin Glenn Mullin
Glenn Mullin
Art Exhibits
His exhibit "The Mystical Arts of Tibet, featuring personal sacred objects of HH the Dalai Lama," opened at the Oglethorpe University of Art in Atlanta in honor of the 1996 Summer Olympics. "The Flying Mystics of Tibetan Buddhism" showed in the Rubin Museum of Art, N.Y., during the fall and winter of 2006-7. His exhibit "The Female Buddhas" is presently on show in the Crow Gallery, Dallas. His next exhibit, "Buddha in Paradise," will premiere in Octobet at the Carlos Museum in Atlanta, in honor of HH the Dalai Lama's visit, before moving to NY.
  The Art of Compassion for Tibet House in New Delhi. After premiering in India the exhibit travelled through six  countries in Europe.
 Established by His Holiness the Dalai Lama, The Tibet House preserves the unique cultural heritage of Tibet

  The Mystical Arts of Tibet
Personal objects from the Dalai Lama, along with Ancient and modern Tibetan sacred art and ritual objects, in honor of the 1996 SummerOlympics. The show then travelled for six years and showed in a dozen museums across the US and Canada.

  The Female Buddha: Women of Enlightenment in Tibetan Mysticism
An exploration of complex symbolism and the ever-rejuvenating vitality of feminine imagery in Tibetan religious art

  Portals to Shangri-La: Masterpieces from Buddhist Mongolia
This exhibition looked at the art of Mongolia as a portal to the mystical land of Shambala. As well as 108 paintings and statues from Mongolia and Tibet, the show included five paintings by the Russian master Nicholas Roerich, created during his Mongolia residence, and inspired by his fascination with Shambhala.

  The Flying Mystics of Tibetan Buddhism
Tibetan art exhibition of paintings created between the 13th and 19th centuries, inspired by historical anecdotes in the Tibetan tradition that speak of mystics with the power of levitation and flight

  Buddha in Paradise : A Celebration in Himalayan Art
Although the Pure Land traditions of China and Japan are reasonably well known in the west, the Tibetan Buddhist art and ideas on the subject are relatively unknown. This exhibit and the accompanying reader fills that void. The exhibit premiered in Atlanta at the Carlos Museum in Emory University, in honor of the Dalai Lama’s visit to Atlanta in October 2007. It then moved to New York, where it shows at the Rubin Museum of Art from February until June 2008.
Tibet
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Tibet
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