Smithsonian National Museum of Asian Art’s Post

Join us on a #CosmicJourney to celebrate #Chandra25 on #SolsticeSaturday June 22! https://s.si.edu/3Vud0Ru Until then, enjoy this oil lamp from East Java, Indonesia—also a technological innovation at the time of its creation in the fourteenth century. Cast in bronze and hung from a chain of interlocking loops, the scaly body of the divine serpent (naga) arches dramatically, its head held upright, supporting a petal-shaped dish that would have carried oil. When the dish was filled with oil, and the wick ignited, the flame would have created hours of light inside a temple or shrine. Just like the Chandra X-ray telescope allows us to see invisible light from other regions of the universe, this innovative oil lamp in the shape of a naga connected people with a world beyond. Image: Naga oil lamp 14th century, Java, Indonesia, Copper alloy, 33 × 17.2 × 6.5 cm (13 × 6 3/4 × 2 9/16 in) without chain, National Museum of Asian Art, Smithsonian Institution, Gift of Ann and Gilbert Kinney, S2023.9.1

  • Ancient copper oil lamp in the shape of serpent with large fangs, intricate patterns and a curved, ornate handle and chain, displayed in a clear glass case in a museum gallery.

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