Judul |
: |
Ikat from Timor and
its outer Islands: Insular and Interwoven |
Penulis |
: |
Peter ten
Hoopen |
Penerbit |
: |
Sidestone Press
Dissertations |
Tahun Cetak |
: |
2021 |
Halaman |
: |
320 |
ISBN |
: |
978-9464280135 |
Harga |
: |
- |
Status |
: |
Kosong |
This is the first study to focus on
ikat of the Timor region from a technical perspective, including microscopy and
design analysis of asymmetry, an understudied subject. Paradoxically, this
technical perspective highlights the human factor. Focused on the last century
of the colonial period, we see the weaver's decisions in close-up, as if we are
sitting next to her. This yields rich insights, not just in materiality, but also
in the weavers' creativity.
Asymmetry is widely distributed in the region yet has largely been ignored.
This is curious, because asymmetry is highly interesting: it goes against
ikat's technical diktat (which prescribes the production of two identical
panels in parallel), hence requires extra work. Seven distinct ways to achieve
asymmetry are differentiated, including visual tricks and illusions, flagrant
displays of virtuosity, and intellectual superiority. On Sumba, women of the
nobility made thrilling and amusing efforts to hide their virtuosity, dyeing
into their men's cloths tiny visual devices, secret keys, which revealed that
their work was not just good, but luar biasa, out of the ordinary. Ironically,
because these late 19th- and early 20th-century dyers were such great masters
at hiding their virtuosity, it remained overlooked by generations of
researchers.
Taking up Marie Jeanne Adams's 1969
call, so far unheeded, to deepen the study of Indonesian ikat textiles by means
of microscopy, the author shot thousands of micro-photographs, allowing a study
of yarn development over time, as well as the differentiation of 21 distinct
weave types, a number far exceeding expectation, and their distribution across
41 ikat weaving regions in the Indonesian archipelago.
In the final chapter, the author analyses what may have spurred the weavers of
the region to create their most intricate, most time consuming, feats of
artistry, and develops a view of these women as far more inventive and
intelligent than they have been credited with before - and more assertive,
using ikat's prestige to spin their men into a web of taboos and prescriptions.
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