The Khmer period in Thailand, a result of the westward expansion of the Khmer empire, lasted from the eleventh to the fourteenth centuries. The period, often termed Lopburi after the town in central Chao Phya River Valley where many of the sculptures were produced, coincided with the brilliant era of Khmer art that created such architectural monuments as Angkor Wat. Lopburi sculpture is generally divided into two periods: the first, or Angkorian period (10th-12th centuries) when the Thai sculptors produced an officially recognised Khmer style; and the second or late Lopburi style when the local Thai artisans of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries evolved a modified style of their own as the Khmer influence began to wane. This piece, most likely a Buddhist deity, belongs to the second, more significant period. It typifies in its modelling the Khmer emphasis on volume, which is further revealed in the facial features and clothing. The short 'dhoti' with its fish-tail pleat, and the wide belt decorated with incised rosette motifs, is characteristically Khmer.
'Asian Art', AGNSW Collections, 1994, pg. 181.
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