See buying choices for this item to see if it's one of the millions that are eligible for Amazon Prime.

37 used & new from $1.15

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
 
 
The Tibetans
 
See larger image
 
Tell the Publisher!
I’d like to read this book on Kindle

Don’t have a Kindle? Get yours here.
 
  

The Tibetans (Hardcover)

by Art Perry (Author, Photographer)
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


Available from these sellers.


7 new from $6.00 29 used from $1.15 1 collectible from $42.00

Editorial Reviews

From Kirkus Reviews
Perry's black-and-white photographs of the Tibetan people have an instinctive freshness that casually takes in an expression or a mood, and his shots around and about the city of Lhasa are as intimate as a walking tour (the view from a balcony on the Potala is so far beyond magnificent it is comical). His landscape images have a formal, composed quality near overwhelmed by the prodigious sweeps, where the wind hurries over the ground, snapping at prayer flags. The text, on the other hand, is appalling. It swings between the exquisitely meaningless (``a distant land that points to a time of lost innocence'') to a spit-flecked, bilious rant against the Chinese occupation that is endless and over the top, a concussive hatred making no effort to differentiate between the Chinese government and the Chinese people. Perry may rightly view the occupation of Tibet as a murderous travesty, but sneering comments like ``Old Lhasa is quickly becoming a new Chinatown'' do more harm than service to the Tibetan cause. (Author tour) -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Product Description
Unique access to an ancient, endangered people strips away myth in a rare photographic portrait

In five years of travel, often incognito, through Chinese-occupied Tibet and its exile communities in Nepal and India, photographer Art Perry found all the mystery, magic, wisdom, and compassion for which this Buddhist culture is fabled. Yet the land enshrined in his moving photographs and evocative, thought-provoking prose is no Shangri la. Behind these faces and landscapes, from scholars and monks to unlettered herdspeople, Tibetans live with the grinding destruction of their culture.

In his journeys through this remote region of the world, Perry outwits the Chinese police with a feisty driver; visits a monastery declared off-limits to Westerners; and roves from the electric excitement of Lhasa's marketplace to the searing light of the high frozen desert. He visits monks who meditate by flickering yak-butter candles; and he captures a young girl's bright eyes, a boy monk's curiosity, nomadic yak herders in their tents, tattered prayer flags, and old men and women blinded by the light. The Tibetans offers armchair travelers, photography buffs, Buddhists, and spiritual seekers of all stripes the pictorial opportunity to enter the lives of a people whose most treasured commodity is the human spirit and whose plight is the last terrible tragedy of the twentieth century.

See all Editorial Reviews

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 160 pages
  • Publisher: Studio (October 1, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0670886459
  • ISBN-13: 978-0670886456
  • Product Dimensions: 12.1 x 9 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #2,411,392 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Tag this product

 (What's this?)
Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items.
Your tags: Add your first tag
 
Help others find this product — tag it for Amazon search
No one has tagged this product for Amazon search yet. Why not be the first to suggest a search for which it should appear?

Sell a Digital Version of This Book in the Kindle Store

If you are a publisher or author and hold the digital rights to a book, you can sell a digital version of it in our Kindle Store. Learn more

 

Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Tibetans: Photographs, December 7, 1999
By A Customer
The following is a review of Art Perry's The Tibetans: Photographs that appeared in The Washington Post's 'Best Books of 1999,' December 5, 1999.

The Tibetans: Photographs, by Art Perry (Viking Studio). 'I had a terrible headache,' the Canadian photographer-author says of his visit with Tibetan nomads. 'On the Chang Tang Plateau it is common for the Himalayan height to push Western visitors to dangerous states of pulmonary and cerebral edema. ... My brain was about to burst, and I could see myself as a future figure of nomadic folklore -- the Westerner whose head exploded.' The nomads worried to see him lying motionless, but a sudden snowstorm on the desert shifted their priorities. They ran from their tents with tea urns, pots and old oil drums abandoned by the Chinese army, and filled them to overflowing with the soft, loose snow. Later, a ginger, garlic and melted snow broth with flakes of dried yak meat,and the prayers of a shaman, eased his aching head. In Lhasa, the author shares vivid, passionate descriptions of the imprint of an invasive Chinese culture: destruction of historic architecture, the proliferation of non-Tibetan stalls hawking 'ugly Asian rip-offs of American products,' 'joyless and cruel' merchants selling half-dead catfish and half-feathered chickens, and garish Chinese brothels. He describes the Khampas of eastern Tibet who, in the face of public executions by Chinese troops, train themselves in commando warfare, no longer believing like most Tibetans that compassion alone can win over evil. His photos of Lhasa are striking. The words and pictures tell of a time and place apart from global culture, compelling in beauty. Perry asks that the hardships of the Tibetan people not be trivialized, that the picturesque not overshadow the difficulties. The sheer humanity in Perry's photos evokes that respect. -- M.M.

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tibetan images snag major prize, May 13, 2000
By A Customer
The following article appeared in The Vancouver Sun, May 10, 2000

'Tibetan images snag major prize for local photographer' by Michael Scott, Sun Visual Art Critic

Vancouver photographer Art Perry has won a major international award for his large-format photographic book The Tibetans: Photographs. Perry, an instructor at Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design, becomes the second winner of the $30,000 Roloff Beny Photography Book Award at a ceremony in Toronto. (Magnum photographer Larry Towell received the first Beny Award for his book El Salvador.) The publisher of Perry's 1999 book, Viking Studio (an imprint of Penguin Books), will share in the award, receiving a $20,000 prize of its own. Perry spent five years collecting images of Buddhist societies in the Himalayas, working primarily in Tibet, but travelling also to Ladakh and Nepal. Last year, the Washington Post named his book one of the year's 10 best. A Vancouver Sun reviewer wrote: "Perry takes us from the slightly familiar markets and brothels of Lhasa clear through to the monasteries and mountaintops that have not been otherwise documented. The text is as clear-eyed as the pictures, but the message it contains is not entirely pretty. Though Buddhism practiced by the Tibetans will certainly endure, Tibetan Buddhist culture is very much under attack, perhaps by we western cultural imperialists, certainly by the country's Chinese occupiers. Read it, or just look at the pictures, and those Free Tibet bumper stickers will seem a lot more immediate." Here in Vancouver, Perry teaches a multi-disciplinary course at Emily Carr on the history of bohemianism - a course that covers film, punk rock and jazz as well as visual art. (I start by telling my students to stay up all night before coming to class," he jokes.) Perry also teaches a course in contemporary literature, a field that has sparked his interest in his own Irish roots. He says he will spend part of the Beny prize money on a sabbatical year in County Monaghan in northern Ireland. Perry plans to pursue both writing and photography during this time. "I have to say I am very, very honoured to be receiving this award," he says. "My father had some of Roloff Beny's big books and I grew up handling those incredible pages. There aren't people in those images, but they were lush and magnificent." Expatriate Canadian photographer Roloff Beny made an international name for himself in the 1970s and early 1980s chronicling a world of sensual beauty, with major large-format books on subjects such as pre-revolutionary Iran and Italy. He died in 1984.

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Tibetans: Photographs, November 29, 1999
By A Customer
Review of The Tibetans: Photographs by Art Perry in Common Boundary, November-December 1999 issue, written by Common Boundary editor Anne A. Simpkinson

The Tibetans: Photographs by Art Perry

Despite unspeakable atrocities, spirited survival. That's the message that photographer and academic lecturer Art Perry conveys in both gripping words and stunning black and white images collected in his recently published book, The Tibetans: Photographs (Viking Studio, a divsion of Penguin Putnam, Inc., 1999). From the onset - in the introduction by Robert A.F. Thurman, Professor of Indo-Tibetan Buddhist Studies at Columbia University in New York City, and in the author/photographer's essay - the reader is reminded of the impact of 50 years of Chinese oppression and genocide that claimed 1.2 million Tibetan lives and destroyed over 6,000 Buddhist monasteries, once the spiritual backbone of the country. In fact, it was the Tibetans' stalwart survival of torture, rape, persecution, desecration, and environmental degradation that compelled Perry to journey to the 'Roof of the World.' For five years Perry traveled not only in Tibet but also to Tibetan exile communities in India and Nepal. The Vancouver photographer, who is also on the faculty of Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design, was determined to shoot pictures that 'speak of a living culture, despite the death and destruction tearing at its soul.' In this, he has admirably succeeded. He has captured the beauty as well as the hardship, the geographic vastness as well as the tiny daily details that make up Tibetan life today. Perry's camera lens rests primarily on nomads and monks. The former he encountered on the harsh Chang Tang Plateau in Ladakh and in the remote Ngari region of western Tibet, home of the 22,000-foot Mt. Kailash, possibly the holiest pilgrimage site in all of Asia. The monks he found by visting about a dozen monasteries, including the once majestic Ganden Monastery that was shelled and dynamited by the Chinese in 1966 and is currently being rebuilt but at an achingly slow pace. Perry's subjects are shown as pensive, fun-loving, prayerful, humble, and hard at work. Their images are sharp and clear as the 'diamond hard light' Perry found on the Chang Tang Plateau, a light, he writes, that inherently carries a 'heightened purity, a profound clarity.' In the end, Perry's portraits of the Tibetan people - their humanity, poverty, warmth, and dignity - testify to their indomitable spirit. Yet, despite their courage and grit, Perry won't let us forget their continuing circumstances, and in fact, leaves readers with a ringing exhortation: 'As you look at the Tibetans in this book, do not forget their story of faith in the face of unimaginable inhumanity.'

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
 
 
 
Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Art Perry wins the country's top photography book award
The following is an article that appeared in the National Post, Toronto, May 11, 2000

(Headline: Photography book award, by Finbarr O'Reilly, National Post)

Vancouver-based... Read more

Published on May 13, 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Conveys a powerful sense of meaning - and loss
The following is a review of Art Perry The Tibetans: Photographs that appeared in The Toronto Globe and Mail, April 8, 2000. Read more
Published on May 13, 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars The pictures speak for themselves.
i liked the pictures in the book though there is not a whole lot of written material on Tibet. it is a perfect book for someone who is curious about Tibet with all its beatiful... Read more
Published on May 1, 2000 by tenzin kalden

5.0 out of 5 stars The Tibetans: Photographs by Art Perry
The following is a review of The Tibetans: Photographs by Art Perry that appeared in the December issue of Photo Metro magazine.

Perhaps the best book to date on Tibet. Read more

Published on January 7, 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars The Tibetans: Photographs by Art Perry
The following is a review of The Tibetans: Photographs by Art Perry that appeared in The Associated Press syndicated column entilted 'Book Bag'on November 29, 1999. Read more
Published on January 6, 2000

Only search this product's reviews



Customer Discussions

 Beta (What's this?)
New! See all customer communities, and bookmark your communities to keep track of them.
This product's forum (0 discussions)
  Discussion Replies Latest Post
  No discussions yet

Ask questions, Share opinions, Gain insight
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
  [Cancel]


Active discussions in related forums
   
Related forums


Product Information from the Amapedia Community

Beta (What's this?)


Look for Similar Items by Category


Great Deals on Magazines

Visit our huge selection of magazine subscriptions often to see the latest special offers and bonuses. Check out magazines like The New Yorker, Wired, and Vanity Fair.
 

Best Books of 2008

Best of 2008
Find our top 100 editors' picks as well as customers' favorites in dozens of categories in our Best Books of 2008 Store.
 

Summer Reading for Kids & Teens

Summer Reading for Kids and Teens
Discover everything from beach reads and board books to teen romance and action-adventure series in Summer Reading for Kids & Teens. And, check off the kids' required reading lists in our Summer School Reading Store.
 

Tidy Up Your Tools

Shop for tool organizers
Whether you're searching for tool cabinets and chests, or boxes and belts, the Storage & Home Organization Store has the selection you need.

Shop for tool organizers

 

 

Feedback

If you need help or have a question for Customer Service, contact us.
 Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
Is there any other feedback you would like to provide?

Your comments can help make our site better for everyone.



Where's My Stuff?

Shipping & Returns

Need Help?

Your Recent History

  (What's this?)
You have no recently viewed items or searches.

After viewing product detail pages or search results, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.

Look to the right column to find helpful suggestions for your shopping session.

Continue shopping: Top Sellers
Paranoia
Paranoia by Joseph Finder
Glenn Beck's Common Sense
My Soul to Lose
My Soul to Lose by Rachel Vincent
Finger Lickin' Fifteen
Finger Lickin' Fifteen by Janet Evanovich

Conditions of Use | Privacy Notice © 1996-2009, Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates