Browse Archive Items (166 total)

Female dancers on ornamental windows

Description: On either side of the entrance porch at Yapahuva are two ornamental windows in which female dancers are used as decorative motifs. The stone window with this and other decorative motifs is presently stored in the Yapahuva Archaeological Museum.
Contributor: Co-Author: Seneviratna, Harsha

Female dancers playing musical instruments at Yapahuva (Sri Lanka)

Description: These 4 female dancers, also from Yapahuva, play musical instruments while they dance.
Contributor: Co-Author: Seneviratna, Harsha

Composite figures of female dancers at Yapahuva (Sri Lanka)

Description: Composite figures of dancers such as this relief from Yapahuva, Sri Lanka are known as ‘Puttu’, where a number of dancers share common limbs. These stone carvings are seen on either side of the main stairways at Yapahuva, Sri Lanka.
Contributor: Co-Author: Seneviratna, Harsha

A female dancer and male musicians

Description: On the exterior face of the stone wall on either side of the main staircase of the central structure at Yapahuva, (Sri Lanka) identified as a temple or a palace, is a frieze of musicians and dancers. Dated to the 13th century, the female dancers here display very vigorous and lively dance forms. The drummers are males.
Contributor: Co-Author: Seneviratna, Harsha

Naginis (cobra women) with musical instruments

Description: This is an artist’s conception of how the Buddha was protected from the rains by a nagaraja (a cobra king) in the sixth week after his enlightenment. The naga women display their devotion by playing various musical instruments. A chance find of the late Mr. Osmond de Silva, the stone plaque is now with his wife, Mrs. Ena de Silva at Matale. The carving may be attributed to the Polonnaruva period.
Contributor: Co-Author: Seneviratna, Harsha

Female dancers and musicians

Description: At the Anuradhapura Archaeological Museum is this stone frieze, of female dancers. This relief carving probably adorned a Hindu shrine of the late Polonnaruva period.
Contributor: Co-Author: Seneviratna, Harsha

A female dancer carved on the wall of a temple

Description: Belonging to the Polonnaruva period is this somewhat fragmentary terra-cotta image of a female dancer carved on the outer side of the south wall of the Lankatilake image house at Polonnaruva.
Contributor: Co-Author: Seneviratna, Harsha

A bronze dancing girl forming a section of a lamp chain

Description: Forming a section of a bronze lamp chain found in one of the relic chambers of the Sutighara Cetiya at Dadigama, Sri Lanka is a female dancer. Presently housed in the Archaeological museum, Dadigama, Sri Lanka the bronze lamp can be dated to the Polonnaruva period.
Contributor: Co-Author: Seneviratna, Harsha

A relief of a female dancer

Description: Seen at the Archaeological Museum at Anuradhapura is this relief of a single female dancer on an elaborately carved stone fragment, ascribed to the 8th century A.D.
Contributor: Co-Author: Seneviratna, Harsha

Female dancer between two male musicians

Description: This stone relief carving of a female dancer between two male musicians can be seen on the north face of the Lion Bath at Mihintale. This pond was attached to a monastic complex, and can be assigned to the mid-Anuradhapura period according to scholars.
Contributor: Co-Author: Seneviratna, Harsha