13 Arts and Crafts of Bhutan





1.      Painting (lhazo)
Traditionally, practiced by both men and women with a religious background and as all the art and dedications were religious.  Painting follows strict iconographic rules was mostly done on cloth for murals and banners (Thangka) with mineral pigments but since the 1980s, synthetic colors are used and auspicious motives adorn the outside walls and woodwork of buildings and houses.
2.      Sculpture (Jimzo)
Bhutanese are famous for the quality and the intricacy of their clay sculpture, representing deities and religious figures. The most renowned craftsmen come from Heyphu Monastery (Neyphu) in Paro valley and have worked the world over.
The quality of the image also comes from the mixture of clay and other materials such as paper, used. The mixing ad beating of clay is done by hand and then the artist on a bamboo or light wood framework shapes the image.
Pottery is most of the time included under sculpture although the daily utensils have a simple shape.
3.      Carving (Parzo)
It includes slate carving, stone carving and woodcarving, the latter being the most practiced. While stone-carving is hardly practiced in Bhutan except prayers on rocks, bas-relief slate carvings of deities or of mantras were widely used on mani-walls, chortens and round the Dzongs central towers.
Although ancient masks were sometimes made of papier maché, it was a time consuming technique, which has been abandoned. Masks today are made in wood, mostly blue pine, and then painted. They represent the different deities appearing in the mask dances, as well as theatsara (jester).
Wood carving for printing purposes, called xylography, is extremely important and requires a great dexterity as well as a properly oiled woodblock. Woodcarving is also done on windows, pillars, and capitals and is one of the arts where Bhutanese excel with very simple tools.
4.      Calligraphy (yigzo)
Before woodblocks were introduced as a printing technique, probably in the 14th century, all the religious texts and official documents were written by hand. Calligraphy is therefore an ancient form of art and a scribe has to have six qualities in his writing: perfect shape, uniformity, legibility, speed, spelling and proportions.
In Bhutan there are different styles of scripts derived from the Tibetan script: uchenumey but the most used is called jyuyig, an elegant cursive.
Also present are the ornamental scripts, such as the Lantsa and the Vartu, derived from Indian alphabets. Before writing on paper, which was expensive, scribes trained on wooden planks covered with chalk.

5.      Paper-making (Shogzo)
Paper is produced from the Daphne and edgeworthia shrubs. It is a lengthy and time-consuming process. The shredded bark is boiled in a large vat before being reduced into pulp and then spread onto a bamboo net. This paper is called tshar shog and is thick, darkish and strong. If the pulp is spread onto a cotton cloth, then the paper is called reshog and is whitish and thinner then the large sheets (A3 size) are dried in the sun and smoothen. Generally these handmade papers are very strong and cannot tear easily.
The sheets were used to write religious texts, official documents but also to wrap objects and were bartered with goods from Tibet.
6.      Casting (lugzo)
Another kind of sculpture is the so-called “bronze” images, which require specific techniques: wax casting and sand casting. These images are of deities and religious figures and the techniques originated from the Newari craftsmen of Kathmandu.
Wax casting or lost waste casting is more time consuming than sand-casting where a non-permanent rough sand mould is used. In both case the finishing of ornaments and details are done by hand. A good caster has to be skilled in drawing, sculpturing, casting, welding, carving and polishing. Many great religious figures used to cast images and ritual objects.
7.      Embroidery (Tshemzo)
Embroidery and appliqué (patchwork) were traditionally the craft of men with a religious background as these techniques were used essentially for religious or royal textiles. The technique of embroidery came from China via Tibet and was used for banners and ceremonial clothes.
Today girls are taught embroidery and appliqué in the 13 Arts & Crafts School (“Zorig Chusum School”) in Thimphu.
8.      Textiles (Thagzo)
Textiles were woven almost exclusively by women. They are made of silk, cotton and wool yarns and can be plain or highly decorated. After a long hand-made vegetal dying process, or the purchase of ready-made threads, they are woven on back strap looms or on pedal looms. The most spectacular weave called Kishuthara includes the brocade technique.
Each pattern and color combination has a specific name and the motives have symbolic meanings. The best weavers came from the East and North-east of the country. They wove, in their spare time, for their family and to pay the textile tax. Nowadays, in urban centres, women have taken up weaving as a profession as there is a market and some men have joined them. The Textile Museum and academy in Thimphu is raising the profile of Bhutanese textiles and is a great encouragement for the weavers
9.      Carpentry (Shingzo)
Carpenters owned their lands. They were called by the government to work on fortresses or monasteries or by their neighbors to work on a new house when necessary. The carpenter was also the architect and knew how to calculate the proportions of a house plan and measure. Assistants could help the carpenter. All the woodwork, beams, pillars, roof rafters and window frames were made on the ground and then set “readymade” in the building. Each piece had a special technical name and some carpenters used to keep a notebook but drawings were not common.
10. Masonry (Dozo)
Cutting and dressing the stones was a special craft practiced by skilled labor but the masons were under the supervision of the carpenter who acted as the architect. It is still the same today. Besides stones for the walls, which come into four different shapes according to their use, masons also prepare flat stones for the courtyards.
11. Bamboo weaving (Tsharzo)
Cane and bamboo products always complemented wood and pottery as domestic items. Villagers living near bamboo groves (the bamboos thrive up to an altitude of 3000m) cut, split, dry and weave the bamboos, especially to make fencing for the fields or roofs mats for temporary sheds. Domestic items such as plates, baskets, quivers, sieves, alcohol containers were woven in semi-tropical regions and villagers used both the outer and inner layers of the bamboo.
12. Gold/Silver Smithy (Trozo)
Goldsmiths were attached to large monasteries and to the Royal Family’s courts and used to do work on request for other people in their spare time. Their work included lay objects like ornaments, betel boxes, teapots, offering plates, and religious objects: musical and ritual instruments, butter-lamps, offering cups and plates, and ewers.


13. Blacksmithy (Garzo)
Bhutan was known to have iron ore in Paro and in the East, prompting the great Tibetan religious figure Thangton Gyelpo (1385-1464) to come to Bhutan for iron. He is known to have built several iron chain bridges. The blacksmiths, besides making agricultural tools, were famous for their skills in making chains amours, daggers, knifes and different kind of swords. Swords had a name according to their location and maker’s name.