Architecture of Cambodia
Architecture of Cambodia
Architecture of Cambodia
Gallery
Gopura
Gopura
Library
Elements
Bas-relief
Bas-reliefs are individual figures, groups of figures, or entire scenes cut
into stone walls, not as drawings but as sculpted images projecting
from a background. Sculpture in bas-relief is distinguished from
sculpture in haut-relief, in that the latter projects farther from the
background, in some cases almost detaching itself from it. The
Angkorian Khmer preferred to work in bas-relief, while their neighbors
the Cham were partial to haut-relief.
Narrative bas-reliefs are bas-reliefs depicting stories from mythology or
history. Until about the 11th century A.D., the Angkorian Khmer
confined their narrative bas-reliefs to the space on the tympana above
doorways. The most famous early narrative bas-reliefs are those on the
tympana at the 10th century temple of Banteay Srei, depicting scenes
from Hindu mythology as well as scenes from the great works of Indian
literature, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. By the 12th century,
however, the Angkorian artists were covering entire walls with narrative
scenes in bas-relief. At Angkor Wat, the external gallery wall is covered
with some 12,000 or 13,000 square meters of such scenes, some of
them historical, some mythological. Similarly, the outer gallery at the
Bayon contains extensive bas-reliefs documenting the everyday life of
Colonett
es
Colonette
s were
narrow
decorativ
e
columns
that
served as
supports
for the
beams
and
lintels
above
doorways
or
windows.
Corbelling
Angkorian engineers tended to use
the corbel arch in order to construct
rooms, passageways and openings in
buildings. A corbel arch is constructed
by adding layers of stones to the walls
on either side of an opening, with
each successive layer projecting
further towards the centre than the
one supporting it from below, until the
two sides meet in the middle. The
corbel arch is structurally weaker than
the true arch, of which the Angkorian
engineers appear to have been
ignorant. The use of corbelling
prevented the Angkorian engineers
from constructing large openings or
spaces in buildings roofed with stone,
and made such buildings particularly
prone to collapse once they were no
longer maintained. These difficulties
did not, of course, exist for buildings
constructed with stone walls
surmounted by a light wooden roof.
The problem of preventing the
Corbelled arch
collapse of corbelled structures at
Angkor Thom.
Stairs
Motifs
Apsara and devata
Apsaras, divine nymphs or celestial
dancing girls, are characters from Indian
mythology. Their origin is explained in the
story of the churning of the Ocean of Milk,
or samudra manthan, found in the great
epic Mahabharata. Other stories in the
Mahabharata detail the exploits of
individual apsaras, who were often used
by the gods as agents to persuade or
seduce mythological demons, heroes and
ascetics. The widespread use of apsaras as
a motif for decorating the walls and pillars
of temples and other religious buildings,
however, was a Khmer innovation. In
modern descriptions of Angkorian temples,
the term "apsara" is sometimes used to
refer not only to dancers but also to other
minor female deities, though minor female
deities who are depicted standing about
rather than dancing are more commonly
Dvarapala
Garuda is a
divine
being that
is part man
and part
bird. He is
the lord of
birds, the
mythologia
l enemy of
ngas, and
the battle
steed of
Vishnu.
Depictions
of Garuda
at Angkor
number in
the
thousands,
and though
Indian in
inspiration
exhibit a
style that is
uniquely
Garuda
As part of a narrative bas relief, Garuda is shown as the battle steed of Vishnu or
Krishna, bearing the god on his shoulders, and simultaneously fighting against
the god's enemies. Numerous such images of Garuda may be observed in the
outer gallery of Angkor Wat.
Kala
The kala is a ferocious
monster symbolic of time
in its all-devouring aspect
and associated with the
destructive side of the god
Siva.
In Khmer temple
architecture, the kala
serves as a common
decorative element on
lintels, tympana and walls,
where it is depicted as a
monstrous head with a
large upper jaw lined by
large carnivorous teeth,
but with no lower jaw.
Some kalas are shown
disgorging vine-like plants,
and some serve as the
base for other figures
Ling
a
The linga is a phallic post or cylinder
symbolic of the god Shiva and of
creative power.[36] As a religious
symbol, the function of the linga is
primarily that of worship and ritual,
and only secondarily that of
decoration. In the Khmer empire,
certain lingas were erected as
symbols of the king himself, and were
housed in royal temples in order to
express the king's consubstantiality
with Siva.[37] The lingas that survive
The lingas
the Angkorian
periodare
are of
from
the of
Angkorean
period
several different types.
generally
of polished
Some lingas made
are implanted
in flat squarestone.
base
called a yoni, symbolic of the womb.
On the surface of some lingas is engraved the face
of Siva. Such lingas are called mukhalingas.
Some lingas are segmented into three parts: a
square base symbolic of Brahma, an octagonal
middle section symbolic of Vishnu, and a round tip
symbolic of Shiva
Makara
A makara is a mythical sea monster with the body of a serpent, the trunk of an elephant, and a head that can have features
reminiscent of a lion, a crocodile, or a dragon. In Khmer temple architecture, the motif of the makara is generally part of a decorative
carving on a lintel, tympanum, or wall. Often the makara is depicted with some other creature, such as a lion or serpent, emerging
from its gaping maw. The makara is a central motif in the design of the famously beautiful lintels of the Roluos group of temples:
Preah Ko, Bakong, and Lolei. At Banteay Srei, carvings of makaras disgorging other monsters may be observed on many of the
corners of the buildings.
Nga
Mythical serpents, or ngas, represent an important motif in
Khmer architecture as well as in free-standing sculpture. They
are frequently depicted as having multiple heads, always
uneven in number, arranged in a fan. Each head has a flared
hood, in the manner of a cobra.
Ngas are frequently depicted in Angkorian lintels. The
composition of such lintels characteristically consists in a
dominant image at the center of a rectangle, from which issue
swirling elements that reach to the far ends of the rectangle.
These swirling elements may take shape as either vinelike
vegetation or as the bodies of ngas. Some such ngas are
depicted wearing crowns, and others are depicted serving as
mounts for human riders.
To the Angkorian Khmer, ngas were symbols of water and
figured in the myths of origin for the Khmer people, who were
said to be descended from the union of an Indian Brahman and a
serpent princess from Cambodia. Ngas were also characters in
other well-known legends and stories depicted in Khmer art,
such as the churning of the Ocean of Milk, the legend of the
Leper King as depicted in the bas-reliefs of the Bayon, and the
Nga Bridge
Quincunx
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_Cambodia
http://myangkorguide.com/citadels-and-temples/
ARRANGED BY:
ARNOLD A. DABAY
ARCHITECTURE