Nomads of the Tibetan Plateau and Himalaya
April 12 – May 27, 2022
Norlin Library, Underground West Gallery
In partnership with the Tibet Himalaya Initiative and the Center for Asian Studies, the University Libraries are pleased to host Searching for Grass and Water: Nomads of the Tibetan Plateau and Himalaya exhibit, featuring photographs by Daniel Miller.
The exhibit showcases approximately 30 photographs of Miller’s from over four decades of photographing Tibetan pastoralists, as well as a number of Libraries' resources contextualizing the work.
About the exhibit
An estimated two million people practice transhumant pastoralism on the Tibetan Plateau and in the Himalaya. Pastoral cultures are not well known and they face numerous threats to their ways of life. This exhibition reveals their perspectives on life as they roll their homes up in bundles and lash them to the back of yaks and move across vast landscapes.
The world of Tibetan pastoralists is marked by the ability to move in search of grass and water for their livestock and operates on a rhythm different from that of industrialized urban centers. Constantly exposed to the elements of nature — rain, snowstorms and drought — pastoralists have an intimate knowledge of their environment and an amazing ability to handle animals.
However, Tibetan nomads didn’t merely eke out a living; they created a unique culture and were part of a remarkable civilization that was the most powerful empire in Asia over 1,300 years ago.
About the artist
Daniel Miller began photographing Tibetan herders in Nepal as an American Peace Corps Volunteer over forty years ago. As a rangeland ecologist and livestock specialist, he has worked with pastoralists throughout the Himalaya, Tibetan Plateau and Mongolian Steppe. His photographs have been displayed in Kathmandu, Beijing and New Delhi. Miller’s images serve as a documentary on nomads in the Himalaya and Tibetan Plateau and their vanishing way of life, adding to our understanding of a remarkable landscape and an extraordinary culture.