On display

Sculpture

Sculpture
late 11th century-12th century (made)
Artist/Maker

This energetically dancing figure is typical of a class of bronze battle standards produced in the later Angkorian period. They represent soldiers in fearsome postures, usually wielding swords. Examples of such battle standards being carried into battle are depicted in relief sculptures of the period.

Object details

Object type
TitleSculpture (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Bronze with traces of gilt
Brief description
Dancing figure, cast bronze sculpture with gilding, 11th or 12th century, Cambodia
Physical description
This energetically dancing figure is typical of a class of bronze battle standards produced in the later Angkorian period. They represent soldiers in fearsome postures, usually wielding swords. Examples of such battle standards being carried into battle are depicted in relief sculptures of the period.
Style
Gallery label
(14/06/2011)
Dancing Figure
1000–1200
Khmer period
This energetically dancing figure is typical of certain bronze
battle standards produced in the later Angkorian period. They
represent soldiers in fearsome postures, usually wielding
swords. Relief sculptures of the period often show these
standards being carried into battle.
Bronze with traces of gilding
Cambodia
Given by David Knight
Museum no. IS.64-1993
Credit line
Given by David Knight
Object history
This object was formerly in the collection of Gilbert Beatty (1887–1967), born Richard John Beatty (also spelled Beattie). Between 1911 and 1951, Beatty worked in various administrative positions at rubber plantations and in government in Malacca, Malaysia. He assembled a large collection of South-East Asian art before the Second World War. In the late 1950s, he became friendly with his neighbours, the Knight family. David Knight (d. 1993), who was then a child, took a particular interest in Beatty’s collection, which he often saw during visits to Beatty’s home-cum-guest house, ‘Palm Beach.’

In 1960, Gilbert Beatty gave much of his collection to David Knight. The objects were shipped to the UK with the rest of the Knight family’s possessions later that year aboard HMS Oxford Castle. Beatty reportedly donated the remainder of his collection to a local museum. Between 1991 and his death in 1993, David Knight donated or sold much of the Beatty Collection to the Victoria & Albert Museum.

See Victoria & Albert Museum registered file numbers 1991/2044, 1993/599, 1993/600, 1993/823
Production
Khmer, Cambodia
Collection
Accession number
IS.64-1993

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Record createdFebruary 13, 2000
Record URL
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