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Glossary of Southeast Asian Art |
Stupas range in size from three hundred feet tall to less than six feet tall. They are made of brickwork, stone, or bronze, often gilded or whitewashed. It is considered meritorious to renew their exterior coatings periodically, sometimes to such an extent that their original decoration can no longer be made out.
The most important architectural parts of a stupa, from the bottom up, are:
1. a square, elevated platform which supports the rest of the
structure, and around which the worshipers circumambulate clockwise; 2. The anda (body) of the stupa, shaped like
an inverted bowl or bell; 3. if the stupa is bell-shaped, a tapering neck which
extends upward from the body of the bell; 4. a yasti (pole), which symbolizes the world axis; 5. the harmika, a square
railing which encloses the pole as a sacred
space; and
6. a set of chattras (umbrellas), centered on the pole and diminishing in diameter towards the top, which signify honor and
protection like the umbrellas held over the head of kings, abbots,
and other important people.
Shwedagon Paya (Rangoon,
Burmese style),
Wat Maheyong (Ayutthaya, Sri
Lankan style)
Wat Phra Kaeo,
Wat Prasat Burapharam,
Angkor Thom,
and in India
Angkor Wat (W),
Phimai (SE),
Preah Pithu (W),
Preah Vihear (N),
Preah Khan (W)
Walking Buddha (Bangkok NM),
Shinbyumei Paya (Burma),
Walking Buddha (Pagan),
Seated Buddha with Brahma and Indra (Pagan)
Ta Prohm (Angkor)
Sukhothai, 14c (Bangkok NM),
Wat Phu,
Krishna Killing Kamsa (Angkor Wat),
Krishna (or Vishnu) Killing Two Enemies (Angkor Wat),
Arjuna and Krishna (Angkor Wat)
Dvaravati, 8c-9c (Bangkok NM)
Angkor Wat,
Phimai,
Leper King (Phnom Penh NM),
Bakong (Angkor)
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