Покупайте редкие бронзовые статуи эпохи Чола и Хойсала только на сайте EXOTIC INDIA

84 inch Height X 56 inch Width X 22 inch Depth
£155,859
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66 inch Height X 34 inch Width X 29 inch Depth
£83,211
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62 inch Height X 52 inch Width X 26 inch Depth
£69,459
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66 inch Height X 51 inch Width X 36 inch Depth
£63,965
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57 inch Height X 36 inch Width X 21 inch Depth
£63,781
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62 inch Height X 36 inch Width X 29 inch Depth
£47,868
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68 inch Height X 28 inch Width X 23 inch Depth
£46,342
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51 inch Height X 42 inch Width X 28 inch Length
£46,218
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72 inch Height X 37 inch Width X 23 inch Length
£41,471
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54 inch Height X 36 inch Width X 24 inch Depth
£35,789
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48 inch Height X 36 inch Width X 26 inch Depth
£35,497
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72 inch Height X 34 inch Width X 25 inch Length
£34,823
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65 inch Height X 48 inch Width X 17 inch Depth
£34,778
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60 inch Height X 43 inch Width X 20 inch Depth
£33,993
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36 inch Height X 23.5 inch Width X 21 inch Depth
£32,157
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50 inch Height X 32.5 inch Width X 26 inch Depth
£30,922
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60.00 inch Height X 28.00 inch Width X 38.00 inch Depth
£29,455
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72 inch Height X 31 inch Width X 24.5 inch Length
£29,128
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52 inch Height X 29 inch Width X 29 inch Depth
£27,093
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60 inch Height X 40 inch Width X 18 inch Depth
£18,788.70
£26,841 30% off
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48.00 inch Height X 30.00 inch Width X 30.00 inch Depth
£26,841
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44 inch Height X 28 inch Width X 18 inch Length
£24,153
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72 Inches Height X 36 Inches Width X 30 Inches Depth
£23,084
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70.50 inch Height X 22.50 inch Width X 21.30 inch Depth
£22,364
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40.00 inch Height X 18.00 inch Width X 14.00 inch Depth
£20,176
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48 Inches Height X 38 Inches Width X 16 Inches Depth
£19,237
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59.00 inch Height X 22.00 inch Width X 19.00 inch Depth
£19,121
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66.5 inch Height X 30 inch Width X 22.5 inch Length
£18,789
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50 inch Height X 28 inch Width X 27 inch Depth
£14,088.75
£18,785 25% off
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39 inch Height X 23 inch Width X 19 inch Depth
£18,554
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39 inch Height X 30 inch Width X 15 inch Depth
£18,509
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52.5 inch Height X 33 inch Width X 14 inch Length
£18,338
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39 inch Height X 23 inch Width X 14 inch Depth
£18,204
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60 inch Height X 25 inch Width X 20 inch Depth
£17,434
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45.00 inch Height X 31.00 inch Width X 20.00 inch Depth
£17,362
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66 inch Height X 29 inch Width X 23 inch Depth
£17,345
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48 inch Height X 25 inch Width X 22 inch Depth
£17,084
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36 Inches Height X 40 Inches Width X 11 Inches Depth
£16,996
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36.00 inch Height X 19.00 inch Width X 31.00 inch Depth
£16,499
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48 Inches Height X 36 Inches Width X 12 Inches Depth
£16,105
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32.00 inch Height X 27.50 inch Width X 19.50 inch Depth
£15,658
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48 inch Height X 28.5 inch Width X 26 inch Depth
£14,987
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64 inch Height X 22 inch Width X 22 inch Length
£14,871
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48 inch Height X 29 inch Width X 25 inch Length
£14,759
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48 inch Height X 36 inch Width X 20 inch Length
£14,481
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48 Inches Height X 29 Inches Width X 20 Inches Depth
£14,311
Includes any tariffs and taxes
54 inch Height X 42 inch Width X 17 inch Depth
£14,123
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48.00 inch Height X 37.00 inch Width X 16.00 inch Depth
£9864.40
£14,092 30% off
Includes any tariffs and taxes
36.5 inch Height X 25 inch Width X 11 inch Length
£13,900
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36 inch Height X 12.5 inch Width X 15 inch Depth
£13,722
Includes any tariffs and taxes
53.00 inch Height X 19.00 inch Width X 19.00 inch Depth
£13,408
Includes any tariffs and taxes
43.00 inch Height X 35.00 inch Width X 25.50 inch Depth
£13,135
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58 inch Height X 31 inch Width X 22 inch Depth
£13,125
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38.00 inch Height X 29.00 inch Width X 20.50 inch Depth
£12,920
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56 inch Height X 17 inch Width X 38 inch Depth
£12,617
Includes any tariffs and taxes
38.00 inch Height X 17.00 inch Width X 12.00 inch Depth
£12,464
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46.00 inch Height X 31.50 inch Width X 15.00 inch Depth
£7440.60
£12,401 40% off
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41 inch Height X 34.5 inch Width X 14 inch Length
£12,074
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45 inch Height X 18 inch Width X 13 inch Depth
£11,827
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36 inch Height X 22 inch Width X 14 inch Depth
£11,802
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24.5 inch Height X 30 inch Width X 19 inch Length
£8944
£11,180 20% off
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36 inch Height X 27 inch Width X 13 inch Depth
£10,964
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37.5 inch Height X 16 inch Width X 12 inch Length
£10,732
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51 inch Height X 30 inch Width X 21 inch Depth
£10,468
Includes any tariffs and taxes
46.00 inch Height X 25.50 inch Width X 13.00 inch Depth
£10,334
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Bronze & Panchaloha Statues – Cast in the Chola Tradition

From the Dancing Girl of Harappa to the Nataraja of the Chola courts, India's bronze tradition is among the oldest and most refined artistic legacies on earth. Every statue in this collection is handcrafted at Swamimalai, Tamil Nadu, the living centre of that unbroken heritage, using the same lost-wax casting method that produced India's greatest temple icons over a thousand years ago.


Inspired by India’s rich sculptural traditions from the Chola and Pallava eras. These sculptures are enduring symbols of spirituality, craftsmanship, and heritage. Whether for your home temple, meditation space, or as a meaningful gift, our collection of bronze and Panchaloha idols offers unmatched durability, intricate detailing, and spiritual significance.


Nataraja, The Cosmic Dancer

Shiva as the lord of dance: the most iconic bronze form in Indian art. Depicted within a ring of fire (prabhamandala), one foot raised, one crushing the demon of ignorance, four arms in perfect balance. Available in: Panchaloha, antique-finish bronze  Browse Nataraja Statues


Ganesha in Bronze

The remover of obstacles, the first deity welcomed into any home, business, or new beginning. Small desktop idols to large statement pieces. Available in: Panchaloha, antique bronze  Browse Bronze Ganesha Statues


Lakshmi & Prosperity Deities

Goddess Lakshmi, Kubera, and Lakshmi-Ganesha sets in Panchaloha, the most auspicious gifting collection for Diwali, housewarmings, and new ventures. ☛ Browse Bronze Lakshmi Statues


Shiva, Meditating & Standing Forms

Mahadeva in dhyanamudra (deep meditation), the Ardhanarishvara (half-Shiva, half-Parvati), and classical standing forms from Pallava and Chola iconographic traditions. ☛ Browse Bronze Shiva Statues


Krishna & Vishnu

From the tribhanga-posed flute-playing Krishna to the four-armed cosmic Vishnu on Sheshanaga, and the devotional Radha-Krishna pairs that are among our most collected works. ☛ Browse Bronze Vishnu Statues


Durga & Goddess Forms

Maa Durga mounted on her lion, Saraswati with veena, and the ten-armed Mahishasura Mardini, powerful, intricately cast goddess forms for puja and sacred decor.  Browse Bronze Goddess Statues


Seated & Standing Buddha

Dhyana mudra (meditation), Bhumisparsha (earth-touching), Abhaya (protection) in antique bronze and polished finishes, for meditation spaces, living rooms, and gifting. ☛ Browse Bronze Buddha Statues


Choosing Your Bronze Statue


By room and purpose


🔸Puja room or home altar: Choose Panchaloha (five-metal) deities, Ganesha, Lakshmi, Vishnu, or Krishna for daily worship. Panchaloha is the traditional sacred alloy of South Indian temple bronzes and is considered ritually pure.


🔸Living room or meditation corner: Nataraja is the definitive statement piece, the cosmic dance form that transforms any room into a space of contemplative energy. Meditating Buddha and Shiva in dhyanamudra are equally suited to quiet corners where yoga or contemplation is practised.


🔸Gifting: A Panchaloha bronze is among the most enduring and meaningful gifts for a housewarming, wedding, Diwali, or milestone anniversary. Compact, sacred, and crafted to last centuries, see our curated gifting sets.


History of Bronze Sculptures


🔸When the Bronze Age was established, it became a highly appreciated metal among people of that Age. Different human societies entered the Bronze Age at different times. But most people claim that it was introduced during the Mesopotamian Era (3300 BCE).


🔸Since then, bronze sculptures and statuettes of Buddhist, Hindu, and Jain icons have been discovered in many regions of India, dating from the second century until the sixteenth century. A group of bronze statuettes has been discovered from the archaeological excavation at Daimabad (Maharashtra), datable to 1500 BCE.


🔸Interesting images of Jain Tirthankaras have been discovered from Chausa, Bihar, belonging to the Kushana Period during the second century CE. The hoard of bronzes discovered in Akota near Vadodara established that bronze casting was practised in Gujarat or western India between the sixth and ninth centuries.


🔸Bronze sculpting began with the Pallava dynasty in the eighth century in the Tamil districts of Thanjavur and Tiruchirapalli but gained momentum under the patronage of the Chola dynasty in the tenth and eleventh centuries.


🔸Among the Pallava Period bronzes of the eighth century is the icon of Shiva seated in ardhaparyanka asana (one leg kept dangling). 


The Heritage of Bronze Sculptures


For over two thousand years, Indian artisans have been casting sacred images in bronze. The tradition began in the Indus Valley, the small Dancing Girl figurine from Mohenjo-Daro (2500 BCE) is the earliest known bronze sculpture in South Asia. It gained extraordinary refinement under the Pallava dynasty in the eighth century, and reached its peak under the Chola kings in the tenth and eleventh centuries.


The Cholas introduced Panchaloha, the sacred five-metal alloy, as the standard material for temple icons. The Nataraja they perfected is still the definitive form: fully rendered from every angle, dynamically poised, spiritually complete.


Today, the artisan community of Swamimalai in Tamil Nadu carries this tradition forward without interruption. The sculptors there are direct inheritors of Chola technique, trained by family lineage, working in the same lost-wax method, producing bronzes that meet the same standard as the tenth-century originals.


Every statue in this collection is made there.


👉🏿 Read the full history of Indian bronze sculpture (Blog)


How Bronze Statue is Made: THE LOST-WAX METHOD


(Cire-perdue or "lost-wax", a casting technique unchanged for over 1,000 years)


The lost-wax process is the reason a bronze statue can achieve the level of detail, the expression in an eye, the tension in a wrist, the drape of a garment, that no other material or technique can replicate.


Step 1: The wax model


The sculptor begins with pure beeswax, melted over an open fire and strained through fine cloth into cold water, where it solidifies immediately. It is then pressed through a pichki or pharni, a traditional tool that produces thin wax wires. These are wound, layered, and hand-sculpted into the complete form of the deity.


Step 2: The clay shell


The finished wax model is coated in a thick paste of equal parts clay, sand, and cow dung, applied in layers, dried between each. A clay pot is fixed to one side, which will receive the molten metal.


Step 3: The firing


This is the ritual heart of the process. The clay-encased model is placed in the fire. The wax inside melts and flows out, cire perdue, the lost wax. At the same moment, molten metal (ten times the weight of the original wax) is poured into the clay pot and flows into the exact void the wax has left. The firing is conducted in complete silence.


Step 4: Chasing and finishing


Once cooled, the clay shell is broken away. The rough casting is refined by hand with files and chisels, defining edges, deepening details, smoothing surfaces. This finishing work, called chasing, is where the sculptor's mastery is most visible.


The result is a statue that is both cast and carved formed by fire, refined by hand.


👉🏿 Read the full bronze statue-making, using the lost wax method, or cire perdue (Blog)


Care & Mention Guide


Panchaloha deity statues (sacred puja idols)


Panchaloha statues often carry a protective coating and hold deep ritual significance. Treat them accordingly.


🔸Dust weekly with a soft, dry cloth (cotton or microfibre)


🔸Do not use lemon juice, vinegar, tamarind, or commercial metal cleaners, these strip the protective surface


🔸Occasionally apply a thin film of sesame (til) oil or cow ghee with a soft cloth to preserve both shine and sanctity


🔸Keep away from direct sunlight and high humidity, especially in coastal climates


Polished bronze statues (decorative and collector pieces)


If your statue has a lacquered or machine-polished finish:


🔸Use a dry polishing cloth to maintain the gleam


🔸If tarnished, apply a quality bronze polish sparingly, test on an inconspicuous area first


🔸Avoid prolonged moisture exposure; dry thoroughly after any cleaning


Antique and patina-finish bronzes


These carry a deliberate oxidised surface, green, brown, or black, that is integral to the statue's character and value.


🔸Do not attempt to polish or remove the patina, it is protective as well as aesthetic


🔸Wipe with a dry or very lightly dampened cloth only


🔸For carved crevices, use a soft brush (a clean makeup brush works well), never a wire brush or abrasive pad


Universal rules for all bronze statues:


Never soak in water. Never use abrasive scrubbers. Always dry completely after any cleaning. For antique, collector, or high-value pieces, consult a professional conservator before attempting any restoration.


FAQs


Q1. What is the difference between bronze and Panchaloha?


Bronze is an alloy of copper and tin, the classical metal of sculpture worldwide, prized for its durability, fine detail, and warm colour. Panchaloha (also called Panchadhatu) is a sacred South Indian alloy of five metals: copper, gold, silver, brass, and lead. While bronze is used for both decorative and sacred sculpture, Panchaloha is specifically the traditional material for Hindu temple icons and puja idols — each of its five metals corresponds symbolically to one of the five elements. All Panchaloha statues in our collection are cast at Swamimalai using the traditional lost-wax method.


Q2. What is Ashtadhatu?


Ashtadhatu means "eight metals", an alloy of gold, silver, copper, lead, tin, zinc, iron, and antimony. Statues and ritual objects made of Ashtadhatu are considered especially sacred in Hindu tradition. The alloy has been used for millennia in the making of puja utensils, ceremonial objects, and deity idols.


Q4. How are these statues made?


All our bronze and Panchaloha statues are cast using the lost-wax (cire-perdue) method, a technique used by Chola artisans over a thousand years ago and still practised at Swamimalai today. See the full process description above. Because every mould is destroyed after casting, each statue is unique.


Q5. Does the green patina on an antique bronze mean something is wrong?


No, the greenish patina (verdigris) that develops on bronze over time is a natural oxidation process and is considered a mark of age and authenticity. It is chemically protective and aesthetically valued by collectors. Do not attempt to remove it; if the patina is uneven or powdery in a concerning way, consult a conservator.


Q6. How long do bronze statues last?


Properly maintained bronze statues last for centuries, the Chola-period bronzes in Indian museum collections are over a thousand years old and still structurally intact. Bronze's hardness and corrosion resistance make it one of the most durable sculptural materials known. The primary threats to bronze are prolonged moisture, salt air (coastal environments), and abrasive cleaning.


Q7. What is Panchaloha & Ashtadhatu?


Panchaloha (Five-Metal Alloy)


🔸Gold, silver, copper, brass, zinc

🔸Symbolizes balance of cosmic elements

🔸Used in sacred temple idols


Ashtadhatu (Eight-Metal Alloy)


🔸Includes gold, silver, copper, iron, tin, etc.

🔸Considered highly auspicious in rituals


Explore our curated range of bronze statues online, crafted using traditional techniques and designed for modern living. Whether for spiritual practice or artistic decor, each piece reflects heritage, precision, and lasting beauty.