Communities & Cultural Exchanges of Champa: the Art of the Chams in Central and Southern Vietnam

Communities & Cultural Exchanges of Champa: the Art of the Chams in Central and Southern Vietnam
Author: My Ket Chau
Publisher:
Total Pages: 385
Release: 2020
Genre:
ISBN:

The art and architecture of Champa, an ancient linguistic and cultural civilization located in modern-day central and southern Vietnam, reflects an interregional artistic koine of Indic culture, a commonality of shared iconography, religion, and the sacred language of Sanskrit. Cham art is related to Hindu and Buddhist art from neighboring Cambodia and most of ancient Southeast Asia. Unique within Southeast Asian art, four extant colossal Cham pedestal-shrines are examined from four archaeological sites of My So n, Tra Kie u, ng Du o ng, and Va n Tra ch Ho a. What objects were placed on the pedestals is not known and interpretations of the imagery carved on the pedestal-shrines are still heavily debated. My dissertation attempts to clarify some of the arguments in current scholarship, holistically across the fields of art history, archaeology, and epigraphical studies, which have been independently analyzed and at times, contradictory. This dissertation explores artistic cultural exchanges and community interactions between Champa and neighboring regions through close analysis of Cham visual culture, including style, scale, iconographies, and patterns. I argue that although the independent entities of Champa were scattered across the coastal areas of modern-day southern Vietnam, the Chams were largely united as visible communities through the combination of colossal image making and written inscriptions. The Chams constructed temple, courtly, and local visual culture to gain economic and social status as itinerant seafarers and trade mediators in the international maritime network of Indian Ocean trade in the 9th-12th centuries. Visual culture became a strategy of economic, religious, and social power for the communities of the Chams.

Cham Art

Cham Art
Author: Emmanuel Guillon
Publisher:
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2001
Genre: Antiquities, Prehistoric
ISBN: 9780500975930

The art of Champa (central and southern Vietnam) thrived from the 2nd to the 9th centuries. It consists chiefly of Hindi and Buddhist deities, carved in high relief from sandstone. This book describes some 100 major sculptures housed in the Da Nang Museum and also provides a historical overview.

Cham Sculpture of the Tourane Museum, Da Nang, Vietnam

Cham Sculpture of the Tourane Museum, Da Nang, Vietnam
Author: Henri Parmentier
Publisher:
Total Pages: 164
Release: 2001
Genre: Art, Cham
ISBN:

The first report in this book offers an overview of Cham art with sixty-five photographs and an introductory text by the eminent French archaeologist Henri Parmentier. Originally published in 1922, this book remains one of the best introductions to the treasures preserved in the Tourane Museum in Danang. It features splendid photographs of Cham art discovered in the main areas of this long lost culture-Mi Son, Dong Duong, Khuong My, and Tra Kieu. The development of Cham art is sketched against the background of Annamese migration pushing the Cham people and their kingdom ever further south. The second part consists of two research reports. The first one by Paul Mus summarizes what is known about the religious practices of the Cham people and is based on artifacts and translated inscriptions. The author also reviews evidence from contemporary Cham culture. The religious inheritance of Champa is related to Vedic, Indian, Chinese, and Annamese forms of worship, and the significance of the Champa king as intermediary between the gods and the soil is also discussed. The second report by Étienne Aymonier contains an overview, dated 1884-85, of the religious practices, ceremonies related to veneration of divinities, marriage, birth, priesthood, death, agriculture, collection of eagle wood, and other customs of both groups of Chams, Muslims and non-Muslims, in Vietnam, and Chams in Cambodia.

The Art of Champa

The Art of Champa
Author: Jean-François Hubert
Publisher: Parkstone International
Total Pages: 514
Release: 2023-12-28
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1783107391

In the 5th century, the Champa kingdom held sway over a large area of today’s Vietnam. Several magnificent structures still testify to their former presence in the Nha Trang region. Cham sculpture was worked in a variety of materials, principally sandstone, but also gold, silver and bronze. It was primarily used to illustrate themes from Indian mythology. The kingdom was gradually eroded during the 15th century by the inexorable descent of the people towards the south (“Nam Tiên”) from their original base in the Red River region. The author explores, describes, and comments on the various styles of Cham sculpture, drawing on a rich and, as yet, largely unpublished iconographic vein.

The Cham of Vietnam

The Cham of Vietnam
Author: Tran Ky Phuong
Publisher: NUS Press
Total Pages: 482
Release: 2011-01-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 997169459X

The Cham people once inhabited and ruled over a large stretch of what is now the central Vietnamese coast. Written by specialists in history, archaeology, anthropology, art history, and linguistics, these essays reassess the ways that the Cham have been studied.

Vibrancy in Stone

Vibrancy in Stone
Author: Bảo Tàng điêu khắc Chàm Đà Nẵng
Publisher:
Total Pages: 287
Release: 2018
Genre: Cham (Southeast Asian people)
ISBN: 9786167339993

This catalogue assembles sumptuous photographs of the world's leading collection of Cham sculpture, along with the most recent insights of Vietnamese and international scholars. The Champa culture thrived in magnificent temples, sculpture, dance and music along the central and southern coast of today's Vietnam from the 5th to the 15th centuries. A focused exploration here uncovers this brilliant yet almost lost culture to newcomers as well as experts. To mark its centenary, the Da Nang Museum of Cham Sculpture has been expanded and refurbished to appropriately house the world's leading collection of Cham art. The museum staff, supported by the Southeast Asia art programme of the School of Oriental and African Studies (SoaS), London University, funded by the Alphawood Foundation, worked in concert with researchers from around the world to present these masterpieces.

Cham Art

Cham Art
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2004
Genre:
ISBN: 9780000017109

The Lost World of Cham

The Lost World of Cham
Author: David Hatcher Childress
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017-03
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 9781939149725

David Childress, popular author and star of the History Channel's show Ancient Aliens, brings us the incredible story of the Cham: Egyptian-Hindu-Buddhist seafarers who ruled a realm that was as big as the Pacific Ocean. The mysterious Cham, or Champa, peoples of Southeast Asia formed a megalith-building, seagoing empire that extended into Indonesia, Fiji, Tonga, Micronesia, and beyond--a transoceanic power that reached Mexico, the American Southwest and South America. The Champa maintained many ports in what is today Vietnam, Cambodia, and Indonesia (particularly on the islands of Sulawesi, Sumatra and Java), and their ships plied the Indian Ocean and the Pacific, bringing Chinese, African and Indian traders to far off lands, including Olmec ports on the Pacific Coast of Central America. Statues in Vietnam of the Champa show men and women distinctly African in appearance and the Champa royalty were known to consist of nearly every racial group. They had iron tools and built megalithic cities of finely-cut basalt and granite, such as the city of My Son in central Vietnam. Its construction is identical to that at Tiwanaku in South America. Topics include: Who Were the Champa?; Cham and Khem: The Egyptian Influence on Cham; The Search for Metals; Trans-Pacific Voyaging; The Basalt City of Nan Madol; Elephants and Buddhists in North America; The Cham and the Olmecs; The Cham in Colombia; The Cham and Lake Titicaca; Easter Island and the Cham; the Magical Technology of the Cham; tons more. 16-page color section.

Arts of Ancient Viet Nam

Arts of Ancient Viet Nam
Author: Nancy Tingley
Publisher: Museum of Fine Arts (Houston)
Total Pages: 376
Release: 2009
Genre: Art
ISBN:

"Explores Viet Nam's rich heritage, from the Sa Huynh culture (1st millennium B.C.) to art from Hoi An. The authors discuss links between Viet Nam and Indonesia, reflected in the Hindu and Buddhist temples and stone sculptures, and investigate trade in gold and Chinese ceramics with Butuan"--Provided by publisher.