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Collections

Unknown
Hanging Lamp with a Kinnara12th-13th century

Not on view
Bronze oil lamp stand with deep verdigris patina, featuring twin boat-shaped basins, a central winged figural group, and a trefoil handle at the top
Artist or Maker
Unknown
Title
Hanging Lamp with a Kinnara
Place Made
Indonesia, Eastern Java
Date Made
12th-13th century
Medium
Copper alloy
Dimensions
12 x 7 7/8 x 7 7/8 in. (30.48 x 20 x 20 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Corinne Whitaker
Accession Number
AC1992.271.1
Classification
Furnishings
Collecting Area
South and Southeast Asian Art
Curatorial Notes

Ornate oil lamps may have entered the artistic traditions of Southern Asia through early trade contact with Roman and Byzantine oil lamps. They have long been used in places of worship and for domestic rituals by adherents of all the major religions throughout the diverse regions of South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Himalayas. Burning oil lamps help demarcate and purify a sacred space, and they can symbolize a practitioner’s enlightenment. Typically made of brass, bronze, or earthenware (see M.84.213.62), they can be hung from chains such as this example (see also 78.10, M.89.101.4, and M.91.232.3), mounted on pedestals (see M.79.152.50a-b and M.78.23a and .23b) or stands (see 82.5, M.84.227.8, AC1993.152.1, and AC1995.152.1), or hand-held (see M.91.204). The fuel can be animal fat, such as clarified butter (ghee), or various plant-based oils that is contained in reservoirs or small burner dishes often ovate in shape with depressed corners. The fuel is ignited with a protruding or floating fiber wick. Figural oil lamps were fashioned in a wide variety of conceptual forms, including anthropomorphic, zoomorphic, phytomorphic, abstract, and combined creations. See Sean Anderson, Flames of Devotion: Oil Lamps from South and Southeast Asia and the Himalayas (Los Angeles: UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History, 2006).

This hanging lamp from Eastern Java features three burner dishes affixed to a column with foliate support struts. Atop the column is a mythical half-avian, half-human creature called a Kinnara (Sanskrit: ‘what sort of man’). An ovoid frame with a trilobed hanging loop rises from the beast’s back. The lamp has a flaring pedestal base.