By Nicky McGavin
Thursday, 08 December 2011
The Phnom Penh Post
A team of archaeologists from the University of Sydney and the Apsara Authority has been exploring the site of an ancient sculpture workshop found near Bakong, one of the earliest Angkorian-era temples.
The workshop is one of three that have so far been discovered within the Angkor Archeological Park, and the team hopes that it will give them a deeper insight into the unknown artists.
“The history of Angkor is still being written”, said Dr Martin Polkinghorne from the University of Sydney, “And our understandings are rapidly changing. What we’re learning from the workshops is making an important contribution to the story.”
Funded by the Australian Research Council, the excavation at Bakong started five weeks ago and, after winding up that dig this week, the team will soon move on to another site nearer Angkor Wat.
The Bakong workshop was first spotted in the 1990s by the former director of the Ecole Français d’Extrême Orient, Christophe Pottier. Exploring the forests around the temple, he came across an unusual quantity of sandstone chips and further exploration revealed two enormous uncompleted statues of a size that is quite rare in Angkor.
Carefully digging almost three metres down into the ground, the team has discovered ninth and eleventh century ceramics and carvers’ tools, casting a new light on our understanding of the techniques used to build and fashion the Angkorian temples.
Through the middle of one of the two dig sites runs an intact wall, crowning less than half a metre below ground level. In the other one bits of roof tiles and other ceramics jut out of the open face about two metres down.
Looking at the face exposed by the dig, different levels show clearly different levels of activity, with evidence of a very highly productive workshop at work in the ninth century.
The proximity of the workshops to the temples their works adorned indicates that the royal and administrative elites wanted to keep a close eye on the work being conducted there.
Despite Angkor being made of stone, only 10 iron chisels have been found in all of the excavations conducted so far, and the team has now added two more to that surprisingly small trove.
The team also discovered tools for smoothing the carvings made out of river stones and clay.
“Tools like this are a direct link to the past” said Polkinghorne. “As a result of these finds, we already understand more about the final processes for carving the statues and walls. Today they use sandpaper and very smooth river stones. The ones we’ve found are unknown and a very significant find.”
The finds have highlighted the differences in techniques used back then.
Early tools were certainly of lesser quality than those used today, which makes the technical achievements of Angkor all the more remarkable.
Some finds have left more questions than answers. Amongst the finds are seven or eight stones the size of two fists with very distinct holes worn into them.
Their purpose isn’t clear yet, though Hou Nolamony, an archaeologist from the Apsara Authority, believes they may have been used as part of a system for sharpening tools.
“It’s a mystery for now,” said Polkinghorne.
Even though the workshops may not have been used for almost 1,000 years, the team was surprised when the owner of the house near the dig site informed them that his grandfather had told him they lived beside an ancient workshop.
Everything that the team discovers will be submitted to the recently formed Angkor International Research & Documentation Centre at the Apsara Authority offices.
Mr Tan Boun Suy, director of the Department for Demography and Development the new centre will become “the memory of Angkor.”
He added, “We will be issuing a call for everyone to submit their research at the coming meeting of the International Coordination Committee for the Conservation and Development of Angkor.”
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