Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Burmese Silver from the Colonial Period [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 256 pages, kõrgus x laius: 280x245 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jul-2022
  • Kirjastus: Ad Ilissum
  • ISBN-10: 1912168278
  • ISBN-13: 9781912168279
  • Formaat: Hardback, 256 pages, kõrgus x laius: 280x245 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jul-2022
  • Kirjastus: Ad Ilissum
  • ISBN-10: 1912168278
  • ISBN-13: 9781912168279
This stunning catalogue presents an exceptional collection of rare Burmese silver. Accompanied by detailed photographs and explanatory texts, this ground-breaking book proposes a new way of looking at Burmese silver.

 

Names, dates, places, and stories identifying the who, when, where, and what of Burmese silver has been the focus of publications on the topic. Are these questions the best way to understand silver, however? Alexandra Green argues that they are not. Too few pieces provide reliable information about silversmiths, production locations, and dates to allow for a comprehensive understanding of the subject. Instead, a close examination of silver patterns reveals strong links with Burmese art history reaching as far back as the Bagan period (11th- to 13th-centuries), connections with contemporary artistic trends, and participation within the wider world of silversmithing.

 

The first European to write about Burmese silver was H. L. Tilly, a colonial official from the late 19th- into the early 20th-century. Tasked with collecting objects for various fairs and exhibitions, he took an interest in Burmese art, publishing articles and books from the 1880s onwards. While much of what he wrote was factually inaccurate and coloured by the prejudices and stereotypes common at the time, his two volumes on Burmese silver published in 1902 and 1904 contain pictures of pieces from the early to mid 19th-century. These enable a reconstruction of how silver designs evolved as the country was absorbed into the Indian Raj, and British and other Westerners became consumers of local silver products. Tilly was also correct in his interest in silver designs. Green uses the visual information from his books to describe the continuities and innovations of designs found on silver from the mid 19th through the mid 20th-century, and she places these trends within local, regional, and global flows of ideas. Many studies of Burmese silver have been plagued by a lack of understanding of the Burmese context. In contrast, Green examines silver from a local perspective, drawing on Burmese texts and information that allows for a nuanced view of the motifs, designs, and patterns that appear repetitively on silver pieces. Using Graham Honeybill's collection, formed over many years, as a basis, she explores how designs and patterns circulated around the country and were innovatively combined and recombined on pieces by silversmiths producing objects for Burmese, Western, and commercial clients.
Foreword 7(2)
Rethinking Silver Objects from Burma 9(26)
CATALOGUE
35(254)
Introduction to the catalogue
37(1)
Catalogue structure
38(6)
Older features
44(6)
U-shapes
50(9)
Floral bud separators
59(13)
V-shaped scene dividers
72(10)
Bracketing and cartouches
82(20)
A triangular floral motif
102(18)
Lotus footers
120(10)
Acanthus footers
130(10)
Acanthus and flower footers
140(8)
Combined acanthus footers
148(8)
Scrolling footers
156(7)
A stylized lotus pattern on the upper border
163(7)
A twisting floral band
170(6)
Mixing and matching patterns
176(6)
Proportionate imagery
182(10)
Impressions of bamboo
192(4)
Boxes and letter containers
196(10)
Mimicry
206(4)
Openwork
210(18)
Shan States
228(39)
Dha-Lwe Swords
267(11)
Dhas
278(8)
Figures
286(3)
Notes 289(4)
Bibliography 293(3)
Acknowledgements and photo credits 296
Alexandra Green is a specialist in Southeast Asian art with a focus on Myanmar (Burma). In addition to numerous articles, she has published and edited several volumes on Burmese art, including Burma: Art and Archaeology (2002), Eclectic Collecting: Art from Burma in the Denison Museum (2008), and Buddhist Visual Cultures, Rhetoric, a nd Narrative in Late Burmese Wall Paintings (2018).