Tibet - Moule rituel à effigies, en bois sculpté (zanpar)

Des images sculptées d'objets rituels ésotériques, d’esprits démoniaques et de protecteurs bouddhistes sont sculptés dans des bâtons de bois appelés Zanpar. Une pâte de Tsampa (farine d'orge grillé et de thé au beurre de yak) est pressée dans les images appropriées pour imprimer en relief des dessins sur des supports en pâte utilisés pour des offrandes sacrificielles rituelles, pour certains rituels de longue vie, pour la prospérité ou pour éloigner les mauvais esprits.

Longueur   27,7 cm
Largeur        4,3 cm
Hauteur       2,6 cm
Poids           157 g

Old Tibetan carved wood Zan par (Zanpar or Zampar) - Wooden mould sticks

Intricately carved images of esoteric ritual objects, demonic spirits and Buddhist protectors were carved into wooden sticks called Zanpar (zan-spar). Tsampa (barley meal and yak butter dough) was pressed into the appropriate images to produce ritual sacrificial offerings, for good fortune and protection from malevolent spirits that often create disorder.

Dough molds were used in Tibetan popular rituals to make dough effigies … The ritual is a form of protection, exorcism, or ransom. The molds would be carried from a monastery by a trained monk to the home of anyone who wished to cure sickness or to deal with various misfortunes. The practitioner could chose from the dozens of small inscriptions on the board to identify the type of obstacle to be dealt with, be it human, animal, bird, supernatural, or symbolic. This accounts for the great number of carved images found on a single board. He then places a ball of dough (tsampa flour and water) onto the appropriate incised images, presses it to form an images of the objects and then places them on an offering plate located on a specially constructed altar. Chants by the practitioner expedite the transfer whatever impediments he discovered into the dough effigies.