Mandalay – Making Buddhas of Bronze and Marble

It’s time to talk about how they make the bronze and marble Buddhas that we find in all those temples and holy places and who knows where-all else. Because make them, the people of Myanmar certainly do. And in abundance.

Bronze Buddhas are still made (as they have been made here for millennia) using the lost-wax method. In this method, the finished statue is first carved in wax on top of a clay base mold. A second clay frame is then molded around the wax statue. Molten bronze is poured in between the two molds, melting the wax (which is therefore indeed lost) and filling the space that the wax had occupied. When the mold is cooled and broken open, the bronze statue inside is a perfect replica of the original wax statue. And every wax statue is indeed a unique original; each is hand-carved and then destroyed in the bronze casting process.

The workshop yard, filled with works in process

 

A finished wax image; behind to the left, a clay base on which a wax image will be carved

Behind the wax statue (upper right) is a finished mold ready for bronze pouring

And voila! A finished bronze statue!

You too can buy a bronze statue, either custom ordered or a standard design.

Pre-ordered and prepaid statues ready to ship to their purchasers

Statues offered for sale

 

Marble Buddhas are made in storefront workshops along a two- or three-block stretch of road in the outskirts of Mandalay. We chanced upon this area while driving…somewhere else…and our guide Zaw, knowing we like this sort of thing, stopped so that we could walk up and down the street and take pictures.

There was a kind of surreal weirdness seeing all these pristine white Buddhas and all manner of other beings just sitting or lying about, many without faces and yet facing in every direction. It’s the faceless ones that particularly enhance the surreal quality of the scene.

     

We particularly enjoyed watching the stone carvers at their work.

 

  

7 thoughts on “Mandalay – Making Buddhas of Bronze and Marble

  1. Hi Dear,

    I am Josh from Vietnam, i would like to buy a Buddha statue follows Myanmar style, could you pls help to provide me with a website or contacts to supplier that i can direct order from them.

    And how is the quality of marble they use, pls refer.

    Thank you,

    Josh

  2. Hi Josh,
    I’m afraid I can’t be of much help to you in this. I am a tourist and a photographer and a writer, not a merchant or a stonemason. The statues looked amazing to me, and I found the shops extremely photogenic. But I cannot speak to the actual quality of the marble, and I do not know any suppliers. I wish you the best of luck in your search.

  3. Hi Ginger,

    Thank you for your sharing. So did you ask for the price of both bronze and marble statues. Please share with me, im so eager to know as planning to purchase one of them.

    Josh

  4. Hi Dear,

    I am don from Sri Lanka, i would like to buy a Buddha statue follows Myanmar style, could you pls help to provide me with a website or contacts to supplier that i can direct order from them.

    And how is the quality of marble they use, pls refer.

    Thank you,

  5. Hi Dear,

    I am don from Sri Lanka, i would like to buy a Buddha statue follows Myanmar style, could you pls help to provide me with a website or contacts to supplier that i can direct order from them.

    And how is the quality of marble they use, pls refer.

    Thank you, My Email donsunil777@gmail.com

  6. I’m sorry, Don. I wish I could, but as I was not buying a Buddha statue at that time, I did not get their contact information. Good luck in your quest!

  7. I think the process needed to make metal buddha statues are quite a lot like lost-was method, or casting process.
    But when it comes to marble buddha statues, it is mostly made by using the hands of craftsmen.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *