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Spectacular 18th century gilt repoussé embellishment of the courtyard facade, restored to celebrate Eduard Sekler's 90th birthday

The Golden Doorway marks the entry to the Taleju shrine located inside the south wing of Mulchowk. The ensemble consists of three gilt repoussé components: a door, a torana (tympanum), and two life-size sculptures of the river deities Ganga and Yamuna. Continual renewal over the centuries has produced a layering of elements, making it difficult to precisely date the ensemble. To completely re-gild the ensemble would be to obscure evidence of its devotional history, but to preserve a damaged and incomplete ruin would be just as unacceptable. Given the local custom of periodically rebuilding religious shrines, it was deemed necessary to repair and re-gild certain damaged elements. A technique was devised to create a matching patina so that the newly gilt copper would not be incongruent with the worn, heavy patina of the original. Since each of the 12 figurines attached to the tympanum were stolen in the 1970s and have since been lost to the international art market, KVPT commissioned and installed replicas based on a detail photograph by Mary Slusser, taken 1968. Draftsmen drew detailed to-scale drawings of each figurine, which were given to three different groups of local artisans. A group of metal artisans - Rajan Shakya, Phalsaman Shakya, and Bijaya Ratna Shakya - generously donated the new figurines, which they produced using the traditional lost-wax casting process.

Golden Doorway

LOCATION

Mul Chowk, Patan Darbar

ERA

17th Century

PROJECT TIMELINE

2012

FUNDERS

The Government of the Federal Republic of Germany; Sumimoto Foundation

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