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Death, Dying, and Resilience in Buddhist Art and Practice

Museum Exhibit Lecture Live Music

What’s Happening?

Tibetan Buddhist practice places great emphasis on the inevitability of death and the importance of meditating on impermanence as a powerful corrective to our cravings for and attachment toward transitory pleasures like power, position, wealth, and material goods. In this way, mindfulness of death can impel us to greater diligence to lead a life with integrity and engage in spiritual practice. When death comes, we are at peace, as well as fully aware of the cyclic nature of existence and accepting of the inevitable journey of death and rebirth. In this regard, the multitude of Buddhas, divine beings, and teachers displayed in the museum’s Tibetan shrine in the form of statues and painted images serve as exemplars and remind us of our own potential for enlightenment.

The presentation begins with a performance by student musicians from the Tibetan American Foundation of Minnesota’s Tibetan Cultural School. The students will use Tibetan and other musical instruments such as Dusty String and Damien three-string guitars.

The presentation concludes with a reception and book signing by Tenzin Namdul and Miriam Cameron for their new publication, Tibetan Medicine and You: A Path to Wellbeing, Joy, and Happiness.

Free to attend, and registration is required. Learn more.

Tibetan Buddhist practice places great emphasis on the inevitability of death and the importance of meditating on impermanence as a powerful corrective to our cravings for and attachment toward transitory pleasures like power, position, wealth, and material goods. In this way, mindfulness of death can impel us to greater diligence to lead a life with integrity and engage in spiritual practice. When death comes, we are at peace, as well as fully aware of the cyclic nature of existence and accepting of the inevitable journey of death and rebirth. In this regard, the multitude of Buddhas, divine beings, and teachers displayed in the museum’s Tibetan shrine in the form of statues and painted images serve as exemplars and remind us of our own potential for enlightenment.

The presentation begins with a performance by student musicians from the Tibetan American Foundation of Minnesota’s Tibetan Cultural School. The students will use Tibetan and other musical instruments such as Dusty String and Damien three-string guitars.

The presentation concludes with a reception and book signing by Tenzin Namdul and Miriam Cameron for their new publication, Tibetan Medicine and You: A Path to Wellbeing, Joy, and Happiness.

Free to attend, and registration is required. Learn more.

More about Minneapolis Institute of Art
Inspiring wonder through the power of art. The Minneapolis Institute of Art enriches the community by collecting, preserving, and making accessible outstanding works of art from the world’s diverse cultures.
When & Where
May 10, 2025, 1:30pm to 4:30pm Timezone: CDT
Free


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