After 500 years, sheer chance reunites head and body of Hindu statue in Paris
  • After 500 years, sheer chance reunites head and body of Hindu statue
    in Paris
    By John Lichfield in Paris
    Published: 19 May 2006

    A wife of the Hindu god Shiva, decapitated in Cambodia in the 15th
    century, finally has her head back, after it was discovered 500
    years later on the other side of the world.

    A Paris museum dedicated to Asia, the Musée Guimet, is celebrating
    the implausible chain of events that reunited a divided masterpiece
    of ninth-century Cambodian art.

    The headless body of a wife of the Hindu god of destruction and
    renewal was found by French archaeologists near the shattered temple
    of Bakong, amid the celebrated Angkor ruins, in 1935. The statue has
    been exhibited since 1938 at the Musée Guimet in the Place d'Iéna in
    Paris, which has the finest collection of ancient Khmer artefacts
    outside Cambodia.

    you can see the acutal pictures in below link

    http://www.orientations.com.hk/hmsep06.htm

    scrol down to the end and you can view the image.

    Last autumn, the museum held an exhibition on Vietnamese art which
    paid tribute in its catalogue to a retired American diplomat, John
    Gunther Dean. The catalogue recounted Mr Dean's efforts, as
    ambassador to Cambodia in the early 1970s, to rescue ancient Khmer
    art from the ravages of the Khmer Rouge, which was determined to
    expunge all record of Cambodia's past.

    To thank the museum, Mr Dean, now 80, offered a gift from his own
    collection of ancient Khmer artefacts. Last month, the gift arrived,
    the sculpted head of a woman found at the Bakong temple site in 1939.

    "I asked him for a Khmer head because we only had headless statues
    but I didn't think for a moment about a possible match," said Pierre
    Baptiste, the museum's curator for south-east Asian art.

    "I brought the head into our [Cambodian] hall looking for a place
    that it could be exhibited," said M. Baptiste. "I had a sudden
    notion the two pieces resembled each other but then thought, 'no,
    things never happen that way'.

    "I put the head on the statue's shoulders. It shifted a few
    millimetres. I heard the little click that you get when two stones
    fit together and the head fell perfectly into place. It was as if it
    had put itself together. I still get goose-bumps thinking about it."

    The reformed statue, which is 4ft 10in high, was beheaded in the
    temple when it was destroyed in the 15th century.

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