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Not currently on display at the V&A

Relief

1st century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Fragment of projecting cornice adorned with upright acanthus leaves and two long-tailed birds sitting on a broad rimmed spherical water basin. On the left near the margin, we see the bust of woman turning right, carrying a large drinking bowl.

Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Grey schist
Brief description
Relief of bust of a woman and two birds between acanthus leaves, 1st Century AD, grey schist, Swat Valley
Physical description
Fragment of projecting cornice adorned with upright acanthus leaves and two long-tailed birds sitting on a broad rimmed spherical water basin. On the left near the margin, we see the bust of woman turning right, carrying a large drinking bowl.
Dimensions
  • Height: 0.05m
  • Length: 0.31m
  • Depth: 0.133m
Credit line
Given by Barger and Wright
Object history
Acquired from Evert Barger and Philip Wright, as part of the collection of finds excavated during their expedition to the Swat valley in 1938. This is no. 62 in Barger's lists.
The site of Gumbat (Pashto for ‘stupa’) was first visited by Sir Aurel Stein in 1926 (Stein. M.A. An Archaeological Tour in Upper Swat and Adjacent Hill Tracts. Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India, 42. Calcutta). It was visited in 1938 by E. Barger and P. Wright during their expedition to Swat and Afghanistan. Despite considerable looting it has been and continues to be an important site and it has been excavated further by the Italian Archaeological Mission (IsIAO) from 1956, in 2005 and from 2011and 2012 in collaboration with the Pakistan government under the Pakistan-Italian Debt Swap Agreement (PIDSA).
Evert Barger, Lecturer in Medieval History, University of Bristol, and Philip Wright, from the Indian Section of the V&A Museum, undertook a survey and excavation of the site during their expedition to Swat. Philip Wright with T.D. Weatherhead, working as surveyor and photographer, were largely responsible for the excavation work in Swat where they stayed for two months in the summer of 1938 while Barger travelled on to Afghanistan. Forty fragments of architectural and sculptural objects were brought back to England, of which 16 were acquired by the V&A Museum. The residue of the collection, which had been left in store at the museum was acquired in 1961. Photographs of the expedition by Weatherhead are in the British Library in the collection of William Vernon Emanuel, who was also a member of the expedition.

Production
Swat valley (Gumbat).
Subjects depicted
Bibliographic reference
H.C.Ackermann: Narrative Stone Reliefs from Gandhara at the V & A, 1975, Plate no.I d, page no.48.
Collection
Accession number
IM.89A-1939

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Record createdMay 7, 2004
Record URL
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