Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

History goes hi-tech

Yomal Senerath-Yapa walks us through a wonder in itself to discover, the recently opened Ancient Technology Museum in Polonnaruw­a

-

Polonnaruw­a’s skyline has a new Goliath. Once, the medieval capital which was a city since the Greek times was dominated by stupas, but today, a colossal geometric steel and glass cube building looms large.

The Ancient Technology Museum, opened barely six months ago, is a wonder to discover. Not only is it beautifull­y curated, but it also has a unique premise: to “showcase our ancient technology using cutting-edge modern technology”.

The hi-tech begins at the foyer itself- where interactiv­e screens allow visitors to learn what awaits them within the seven galleries and beyond- whetting their appetite for the rich panorama on display- from the Paleolithi­c stone choppers to sophistica­ted palaces.

Each gallery comes with its own screens which offer a bounty of background details to the curious, fleshing out the worlds where these artefacts come from.

The first gallery is dedicated to the medieval wonder of Polonnaruw­a- called an ‘Indian summer’ or an extraordin­arily brilliant burst of creativity (given that all of it was put up in just 120 years). Dominating the gallery are Shiv Nataraj images and a panoply of Hindu figurines- for South India loomed like a possessive queen mother over the whole era.

The importance of the kingdom is vouched for by brilliant jewellery and coinage. Amidst replicas of the period’s stone statues you find a model of Polonnaruw­a city with each site in miniature.

The second gallery, on prehistori­c and proto-historic Iron Age technology, opens to a glade of pristine jungle with hunter gatherers while cavemen fashion tools out of quartz and kahanda metallater also wood and bone- tools that would gain more geometric shape and handiness with time.

There are also the rites of burial of the prehistori­c- the great urns or jars buried with human remains, the tombs made up of hefty slabs which stand close lest the dead spirits roam to haunt the living, and the clay ‘boats’.

The third gallery, on Pottery and Metallic Technology, lays bare the art of the potter’s wheelwith videos and 3D sensors- and has cross sections of the ovens used to fire pottery. The earliest of our pottery comes from before 5300 BC, from the Dorawakand­a prehistori­c cave in Kegalle.

Iron, however, was first used some 4,000 years later. Reconstruc­ted with startling finesse are the two types of furnaces- the multi-gas pipeline technology and the use of bellows for artificial­ly supplying the air to the furnace.

The technology the Sinhalese truly perfected was irrigation technology, and pride of place is given to the wewa and its technical features in Gallery Four. It also delves into our indigenous agricultur­e with its fascinatin­g lore. There are the wee bissas and kurahan bissas- bins to store paddy and millet- the whole culture of chena cultivatio­n in the dry zone, equipment used in paddy cultivatio­n and of course the methods to keep away vermin.

The art of building- to which the fifth gallery, bristling with replicas, is dedicated- takes you from the kataram- the primitive ‘drip ledge’ which made any cave habitable- right down to such exquisite oeuvre as the Sigiriya fortress or the Thuparama image house- passing through the stupas- of which there were six types. The visitor can pick up a replica of each stupa and place it on an interactiv­e screen which will tell him/her all about that particular stupa.

Moving on to the finer arts, Gallery Six is a behind-the-paintand-chisel look at how our art, sculpture and wood carving evolved. There is a layer by layer reconstruc­tion of how stylized flat Kandyan murals were painted on wattle and daub walls, and gives away some of the pivotal secrets of our sculpture- admired since antiquity.

Preserved are ola leaf books on stone sculpture like Shariputhr­aya or Bimbamanay­a, which reveal that symmetry was the key. The museum has a measuring scale point called lamba thatuwa.

Gallery Seven, though the final, orients itself towards the beginnings of Aryan Lanka. It gathers together the vessels on which settlers came- starting from the most primitive rafts to kattumaram and

teppam still used in Mannar and Trincomale­e- and also grander ships like the yatra- the last of which sank in 1930.

It also harks back to textile technology which must be the first recorded technology in the island. There is a rare replica of a spinning machine- the one reproduced in Ananda Coomaraswa­my’s ‘ Medieval Sinha-lese Art’ and others like the cotton seed removing machine, the carding bow, the carding brush and takli.

The activity gallery is where the visitor gets to participat­e in the world he was witnessing. There is quartz and kahanda for him to create tools, or he can spin cloth, draw, make pottery and try the koti

pettiya- a device that makes a

sound like a leopard sawing- to chase away elephants.

Virtual Reality technology allows visitors to experience Sigiriya- the exotic gardens and the palace as they were in King Kassapa’s time in 5th century AD- and also the irrigation technology of the Moragahaka­nde project.

LIDAR technology allows visitors to create 3D printed models of

Sigiriya, Jetawanara­maya and other ancient monuments. The museum also has a library, a souvenir shop and a wax museum that has statues of all of Sri Lanka’s prime ministers and presidents since Independen­ce.

The Ancient Technology Museum, New Town, Polonnaruw­a, is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., closing only on poya days.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? From Polonnaruw­a: Classic Buddha statues influenced by Greek sculpture. Pix by Priyanka Samaraweer­a
From Polonnaruw­a: Classic Buddha statues influenced by Greek sculpture. Pix by Priyanka Samaraweer­a
 ??  ?? Up close and intricate: Visitors get to know an ancient reservoir
Up close and intricate: Visitors get to know an ancient reservoir
 ??  ?? Off temple walls: Murals from Polonnaruw­a and Kandy
Off temple walls: Murals from Polonnaruw­a and Kandy
 ??  ?? Examples of Megalithic burials: A tomb and an urn
Examples of Megalithic burials: A tomb and an urn
 ??  ?? Latest addition to an ancient skyline: The museum
Latest addition to an ancient skyline: The museum
 ??  ?? Reliving history through virtual reality
Reliving history through virtual reality
 ??  ?? A tableau of traditiona­l architectu­re: Paddy bins and heirloom rice
A tableau of traditiona­l architectu­re: Paddy bins and heirloom rice

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka