Arts & Crafts

There is little tradition of artistic craftsmanship in Ladakh, most luxury
articles inthe past having been obtained through imports. The exception
isthe village of Chiling, about 19km up the Zanskar river from Nima. Here, a
community ofmetal workers, said to be the descendants of artisans brought
from Nepal inthe mid -17th century to build one of the gigantic Buddha
-images at Shey, cary on their hereditary vocation. Working in silver, brass
and copper, they produce exquisite items for domestic and religious use :
tea and chang pots, teacup - stands and lids, hookkah-bases, ladles and
bowls and, occasionally, silver chorten for installa-tion in temples and
domestic shrines.
Those who cannot afford the expensive ware of
the Chiling craftsmen, are supplied by local blacksmitsh (gara), witht the
bowls and cooking pots they need for everyday use, as well as with
agricultural implements. The gara also make the large and ornate iron stoves
seen in kitchens of the richer Ladakhi homes. In general, craftsmanship has
not developed beyond and production of everyday item for personal and
domestic use.
Pattu, the rough, warm, woolen material used for
clothing is made from locally produced wool, spun by women on drop-spindles,
and woven by semi-professional weavers on portable looms set up in the
winter sunshine, or under the shade of a tree in summer. Baskets, for the
transport of any kind of burden - manure for the fields, fresh vegetables,
even babies -are woven out of willow twigs, or a particular variety of
grass. Wood work is confined largely to the production of pillars and carved
lintels for the houses, and the low carved tables that are a feature of
every Ladakhi living-room.
Many such items, together with others
recently introduced as part of the development process, are available in the
District Handicrafts Centre at Leh, which exists to train local people as
well as to market their products. There you can find, in addition to
traditional objects, a few special items like pashmina shawls- rough
compared withthose produced in Srinagar, but soft and warm as only pure
pashmina can be ; and carpets in designs and techniques borrowed from Tibet.
Similar carpets are also to be had at the Tibetan Refugee Centre at
Choglamsar.
The Handicrafts Centre also has a department of
Thangka painting. These icons on cloth are executed in accordance with
strict guidelines handed down from past generations. In the same tradition
are the mural paintings in the gompas, where semi-professional , both monks
and laymen,, labour tokeep the walls decorated with images symbolizing the
various aspects of the Buddhist Way. The skill of building religious statues
is also not extinct. The gigantic representation of Maitreya, was installed
in Thikse Gompa as recently as the early 1980s.