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Details
- Other Title
- Manuscript (Kammavaca)
- Place where the work was made
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Myanmar
- Date
- 20th century
- Media category
- Book
- Materials used
- cotton cloth, lacquer, gold leaf, wood
- Dimensions
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a - front cover, 13.5 x 59 cm
b - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
c - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
d - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
e - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
f - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
g - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
h - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
i - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
j - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
k - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
l - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
m - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
n - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
o - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
p - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
q - folio with script, 13.5 x 59 cm
r - back cover, 13.5 x 59 cm
- Credit
- Gift of Andrew and Ursula Tompkins 2007
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 45.2007.a-r
- Copyright
- Share
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About
Buddhist manuscripts like this one are known in Pali as 'Kammavaca' and are produced and used in present day Myanmar. They contain excerpts from the ‘Pali Vinaya’ religious texts that outline monastic duties and are used in various rituals including ordinations and the gifting of new robes. The earliest of these manuscripts may date to the 1400s yet most surviving examples are from the late 1800s and early 1900s.
It is still customary for young Burmese boys to join the monastery for a period of time. On the occasion of their son entering the monkhood, a family would commission this type of manuscript to be presented as a gift to the head monk. This gift and their sons' involvement with the monastery would earn the family merit.The rectangular format of this type of manuscript has been inherited from the conventions of Indian palm-leaf manuscripts. Early Burmese manuscripts were also constructed of woven palm leaf. Less commonly, discarded monks' robes or other sacred cloth was used. Later in the mid-18th century cut-sheets of brass and copper easily resourced from local markets came into use.
Irrespective of the base-material, the sheets were covered in a thick layer of lacquer, allowed to dry and then polished. Decoration was then applied to the sheets in a technique known as 'shwezawa'. Gold leaf was applied to the polished lacquer surface and decorative designs were etched into the gold leaf. Red lacquer was then painted into the etched line. The text, read from left to right, top to bottom is written in black lacquer in the square shaped Pali script known as ‘magyi zi’ or tamarind seed script because of its dark colour. In this example the text is interspersed with tiny fan-tail birds and vegetal patterns. The two teak covers are further decorated with figures of kneeling ‘nats’ or super-natural beings.
Asian Art Department, AGNSW, 2016
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Places
Where the work was made
Myanmar
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Exhibition history
Shown in 1 exhibition
Beyond Words: Calligraphic Traditions of Asia, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 27 Aug 2016–30 Apr 2017