Enquiry about object: 8537
Burmese Pegu Bronze of a Female Water Carrier
Pegu, Burma (Myanmar) circa 1920
height: 20cm, width (of base): 8.7cm, weight: 730g
Provenance
UK art market
This finely-cast bronze from Pegu, Burma, shows a young woman in traditional Burmese dress with a terracotta water pot balanced on her head.
The contours of the woman’s body are well observed. She stands with one hand on her hip and the other balances the water pot on her head.
The bronze is attached to its original wooden stand. It is unsigned.
The casters of Pegu, located near to Rangoon, produced finely detailed bronzes of local people engaged in everyday activities, such as this example. Such sculptures emerged at the same time as Burmese painters adopted Western-style realism. Their naturalistic forms drew on European techniques as well as Burmese religious statuary. Pegu bronzes made mostly for the local expatriate market were exhibited at the various British Empire Exhibitions held in the 1920s and 1930s, both in London but also in India (from where Burma was administered during colonial rule) and Rangoon itself.
Figurines such as these were bought by British administrators and their families in Burma as souvenirs and gifts for friends on their return home. As Fraser Lu (1994, p. 143) says, some examples, especially later examples, barely rise above tourist kitsch, but others, such as the the example here, with its sense of proportion, realism and attention to detail is a minor masterpieces of bronze casting. Such bronzes are testament to the ingenuity and flexibility of Burma’s master craftsmen during the colonial era who were able to switch between producing high quality items for local as well as expatriate consumption.
The sculpture here is beautiful, and in fine condition. The bronze has a dark, brown patina.


Above: Two photographs of a collection of Pegu bronzes we previously sold to Singapore’s National Gallery, as displayed in the National Gallery.
References
Fraser-Lu, S., Burmese Crafts: Past and Present, Oxford University Press, 1994.









