The Provenance of a Silver Vajrasattva and the Loudon Family

Author(s)

  • Caroline Drieënhuizen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52476/trb.13475

Abstract

Using historical source material to reconstruct the origin and collecting history of a statuette of a vajrasattva owned by the Loudon family – now in the possession of the Rijksmuseum and selected to be part of the Pilot Project Provenance Research on Objects of the Colonial Era – gives us insights into the function of such objects within particular social groups such as the European colonial elite in Indonesia (to which the Loudon family belonged), the functioning of Dutch (colonial) society and the development of cultural knowledge about the colonized population. This is, however, a limited perspective. It ignores other points of view: it largely excludes the knowledge and insights of the local population, the meanings the object has had for them in the past and present, and people’s agency in these European collecting and knowledge production processes.

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Author Biography

  • Caroline Drieënhuizen

    Dr Caroline Drieënhuizen wrote her PhD (University of Amsterdam, 2012) on the European elite in colonial Indonesia and its collections. Her interests lie in material objects and their biographies, museums and decolonisation processes. She works at the Open Universiteit (Heerlen, Netherlands) and last year she was involved in the Pilot Project Provenance Research on Objects of the Colonial Era researching the provenance of Indonesian objects.

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Published

2022-12-14

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

“The Provenance of a Silver Vajrasattva and the Loudon Family”. 2022. The Rijksmuseum Bulletin 70 (4): 356-73. https://doi.org/10.52476/trb.13475.