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HOME : Asian Art : Archive : Khmer Bronze Sculpture of the Buddha
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Khmer Bronze Sculpture of the Buddha - FZ.411 A
Origin: Cambodia
Circa: 12 th Century AD to 13 th Century AD
Dimensions: 9.5" (24.1cm) high
Collection: Asian
Style: Angkor Wat Period
Medium: Bronze
Condition: Extra Fine


Additional Information: SOLD

Location: United States
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Description
The Khmer civilization, today embodied by the temples and ruins of Angkor, one of mankind's most astonishing and enduring architectural achievements, flourished from 802-1431 A.D. From the great citadel of Angkor, the kings of the Khmer empire ruled over a vast domain that reached from what is now southern Vietnam to Yunan, China and from Vietnam westward to the Bay of Bengal. The original city was built around the Phnom Bakeng, a temple on a hill symbolizing the mountain that stands in the center of the world according to Hindu cosmology. Successive kings enlarged the city, building other temples devoted to various Hindu deities and large reservoirs used for irrigation, which also symbolized the ocean surrounding the holy central mountain. Architecture reached its zenith during the Angkor Wat style, certainly best revealed in the grand Visnuite temple after which this style is named. However, during this period of architectural innovation, sculpture instead aesthetically returned back to an earlier era, specifically the first half of the 10th century. The sculptural archaism of this period may have been influenced by the politics. Thus, the renewed grandeur of Angkor Wat sculpture reflected the power of the king. It is also possible that sculptors looked longingly back at the motifs and styles of previous periods that had fallen into disuse. Dating from the Angkor Wat era, this sculpture of the Sakyamuni is depicted standing, forming the double Abhaya Mudra, also known as the Gesture of Fearlessness. This hand gesture symbolizes protection, benevolence, and peace. He wears a skirt and a cape that falls into fish-tale edges. Heavy ornaments weigh down his ears, indicative of his aristocratic past. The large conical bump on top of his head, known as an ushnisa, symbolizes his overwhelming wisdom. More than a gorgeous work of art, this sculpture is a memorial to perhaps the most flourishing creative period in the great history of Angkor. - (FZ.411 A)

 

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