Royal Bronzes: Cambodian Art of the Divine exhibition (Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia), Minneapolis, USA, on view from 25 October 2025 to 18 January 2026) presents more than two hundred Khmer bronzes and related objects, tracing Cambodia’s metal sculpture from early kingdoms to the post‑Angkor era. The project shows how finely cast images of Hindu and Buddhist deities served as instruments of kingship, ritual, and temple devotion, complementing Angkor’s famous stone architecture.

Drawing on recent archaeological discoveries and technical studies of casting and alloys, the exhibition reconstructs royal foundries, workshop practices, and networks of patronage. It also foregrounds issues of looting and restitution, highlighting notable bronzes returned to Cambodia and reinserted into their historical and religious contexts.
The Orientations Magazine January/February 2026 article on “Royal Bronzes: Cambodian Art of the Divine” by Liu Yang situates the exhibition within current scholarship on Khmer metalwork and royal religion, highlighting how new research reshapes long‑held views of Angkorian art. It discusses key essays from the catalogue that combine stylistic analysis, inscriptions, and scientific examination of alloys to show how bronze imagery functioned at court, in temples, and in regional sanctuaries. Particular attention is given to the role of the Musée Guimet–National Museum of Cambodia partnership and to case studies of restituted bronzes, making the article both a curatorial overview and a reflection on heritage politics and conservation.


















