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Victory to Ashes: War’s Lessons from the Mahābhārata

This talk follows the trail of one of Southeast Asian art history’s most enduring mysteries: the Prakhon Chai hoard, a cluster of Buddhist bronzes reportedly found in northeast Thailand in the mid-1960s and soon dispersed across international collections. Their murky discovery, uncertain provenance, and inconsistent attributions have long baffled scholars.

At the heart of the investigation is a small bronze bodhisattva now at the Art Institute of Chicago. Often identified as the future Buddha Maitreya but never convincingly so, the figure offers clues that point both toward—and away from—the Prakhon Chai group. Through close comparison with related bronzes in Thailand and the United States, I explore whether this piece truly belongs to the so-called hoard, and reconsider how such objects have been named, classified, and circulated over the years.

The talk also probes the wider network behind the hoard—dealers, collectors, and narratives shaped by the art market and modern national boundaries. These forces complicate our understanding of the bronzes’ original context and the cultural world of the Khorat Plateau in the 7th–8th centuries.

By piecing together scattered evidence, I propose a more nuanced picture of bronze production, mobility, and Buddhist devotion in early Southeast Asia—and a fresh look at a case that remains far from closed.

About the speaker

Deven M. Patel is a Sanskrit scholar, translator, and critic. His monograph Text to Tradition: The Naiadhīyacarita and Literary Community in South Asia (2014) is a landmark study of one of Sanskrit literature’s canonical literary works viewed through the lens of eight centuries of critical reception. He has also published on hermeneutics and translation practices, linguistics, and poetics in ancient and medieval India. Current areas of research and translation include a critical translation of the Mahābhārata’s war books and modern Sanskrit literature.  Currently the Director of Undergraduate Studies in Comparative Literature, he holds an appointment as Associate Professor of Sanskrit and Classical Indian Literature at the University of Pennsylvania and lectures on ancient epics, critical theory, philosophy, and mythology. 

When

Thursday, 5 March 2026 at 19:00 (Bangkok Time)

Where

Online (Available via Zoom)

Admission

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