Cloths
of Great Power and Artistry
Indonesia
enjoys an enviable reputation as a veritable paradise
for textile connoisseurs. On Bali, as elsewhere in the
archipelago, traditional textiles are much more than
simply decorative pieces of cloth. To the Balinese they
represent a mark of cultural identity and religious
exclusivity, while the use of certain cloths also convey
subtle differences of birth, age, sex, title and caste.
Traditional fabrics also serve many sacred and ritual
functions, distinguishing the holy from the profane
and the good from the evil.
Humans
are not the only ones who wear clothes - the Balinese
clothe almost everything, which possesses a head, a
body and feet. Buildings, shrines, altars, ancestor
stones and statues are all wrapped in costly or magically
permeated apparel during rituals. The cotton yarns are
said to bring strength to both men and objects, protecting
them and warding off harmful influences.
The
ritual wardrobe
The
ritual or adat wardrobe of the Balinese consists of
several lengths of cloth of various sizes. These are
not tailored, but are used in the form in which they
are woven, and then draped artfully around the body.
Boys and men wrap a large skirt (kamben or wastra) around
themselves and tie it in such a way that a long fold
hangs down in front between the legs, nearly touching
the ground. Girls and women wrap their bodies below
the waist clockwise as tightly as possible.
In
some rituals, an inner cloth is wound around the body
as an undergarment (tapih or sinjang). A kamben or wastra,
which can extend down to the ankles, is then wrapped
over the undergarment. 'Me end is tucked in at the waist
near the left hip, and the kamben is generally secured
by a narrow sash wound around the body several times.
Tube
skirts (sarung) do not belong to the traditional wardrobe,
though imported Javanese cloths with batik patterns
are commonly used as kamben. During the past few years,
Balinese weft ikat cloths (endek) from Gianyar, Sidemen,
Bubunan or Cakranegara, (Lombok) have increasingly come
into use.
A
smaller sash, known as saput or kampuh, is wound round
the hips or the chest by boys and men, falling approximately
to the knees. The belt (umpal) attached to the end of
this cloth is wrapped around the body and knotted below
the upper edge of the saput. Another type of sash, known
as sabuk or pekekek, is generally so long that it is
wrapped once round the body and then knotted. Men also
wear a graceful head cloth, sometimes in the form of
a little boat-shaped hat (destar lidang).
Women's'
outer garments consist of a long and similar to a belt
(sabuk, setagen) holding the skirt together, and a breast-cloth
(anteng) wrapped tightly around the upper part of the
body. Sometimes a part of the anteng will be draped
over one shoulder. In former times, women also wore
loose shoulder sashes (selendang).
Until
the 1930s, Balinese women were usually naked above the
waist in everyday situations, but always covered the
upper parts of their bodies when bringing offerings
to the temple or taking part in festive court events.
Even though one can still see the traditional I)are-shouldered
dress at temple feasts and family rituals, this has
now been replaced in many parts of Bali by the long-sleeved,
lacey kebayas that come from Java and are now considered
part of the national dress.
Traditional
textile forms
The
art of Balinese textile decoration is best expressed
in men's skirt, chest and head cloths, and women's chest
and skirt cloths. Three categories may be distinguished.
The first comprises cloths decorated with gold leaf,
called prada. These were traditionally produced for
royalty and are still used by girls and boys during
tooth-filing and marriage ceremonies. The outlines of
the design are first drawn on the cloth and coated with
glue; the gold-leaf is then applied. Stylized blossoms,
plants and birds are the most common motifs; the edges
of the cloth are frequently decorated with intertwined
swastikas - the symbol of Balinese Hinduism. Other pieces
show a distinct Chinese influence.
A
second group, just as brilliant and expensive as the
prada cloths, are the Balinese songket brocades. Decorative
gold and silver colored weft threads are added when
these cloths are on the loom. The range of patterns
extends from simple crosses and stars to elaborate compositions
with trees, creepers, flowers and snakes.
From
a historical point of view the production of brocaded
fabrics with ornamental wefts of gold and silver was
for centuries the exclusive preserve of the higher castes.
Today, brahmana women, along with wives and daughters
in the princely satriya dalem and satriya jaba families,
continue to show considerable skill in this art. Centers
of songket production are still to be found in the aristocratic
and brahmanical neighborhoods of Karangasem (Amlapura,
Sidemen), Buleleng (Bubunan, Bratan), Klungkung and
Gelgel, Mengwi (Blayu) and Negara Uembrana).
In
1980, the then governor of Bali, Prof Ida Bagus Mantra,
appealed to his fellow citizens to employ Balinese textiles
in their ceremonial dress. Apart from promoting village
crafts and encouraging the development of the Balinese
economy, this has had the effect of reducing the role
of these textiles as aristocratic symbols. Anyone of
a certain position or wealth is now in a position to
flaunt their songket publicly at religious and social
events. As a result, the demand for songket cloth has
increased dramatically in the past few years.
The
third major type of Balinese textile is weft ikat or
endek, the weft threads of which are dyed prior to weaving.
Areas to be remain uncolored are bound tightly together.
Different color combinations may be achieved by repeating
the binding and dyeing process several times. Dye is
also sometimes applied by hand to the unwoven weft.
Endek
is by far the most popular Balinese textile form, and
its designs are consequently more reliant on fashion
and current trends. The demon heads and wayang figures
of the older cloths have nearly all been replaced now
by finer geometric motifs. The popularity of endek is
spreading beyond Bali to the rest of Indonesia and abroad
as enticing new designs are created.
Magical
textiles from Tenganan
The
famous double ikat cloths from Tenganan Pegeringsingan
rank among the masterworks of Southeast Asian textile
art. In double ikat, the weft and the warp threads are
both patterned using the ikat method. This is an immensely
difficult process, requiring great precision not only
in dyeing but also in maintaining the proper tension
in the threads on the loom, so that the patterns will
align properly.
The
showpieces of Tenganan are the so called geringsing
cloths, instantly recognizable by their muted colors
- red and reddish brown, eggshell and blue-black - achieved
by dyeing or over-dyeing with red sunti root bark (Morinda
citrifolia) and taum or indigo. It is often claimed
that the traditional production of the fabric required
blood from human sacrifices. These wild rumors have
been refuted many times over, but persist in the tourist
literature despite the protests of scholars and the
people of Tenganan.
All
geringsing are made of cotton yarn, decorated with geometrical
or floral motifs, lozenges, stars or small crosses.
The so called geringsing wayang is best known large
four-pointed stars surrounded by four scorpions divide
the main field into semi-circular segments, while inside
are buildings, animals and wayang figures in the style
of ancient east Javanese bas-reliefs, ranging across
the cloth in groups of twos and threes.
Geringsing
cloths are said to possess the power to protect against
malevolent earthly and supernatural enemies. The fame
of the cloths' power has spread throughout Bali, and
one wonders whether the independence and wealth of the
Tenganan community is not in large part due to a monopoly
in the manufacture of these magically potent fabrics.
Geringsing
are of importance to all Balinese, irrespective of whether
they are used ~Is protective or destructive agents.
It is still the custom in quite a few villages to wind
the geringsing cloths around the seats and sedan chairs
in which the gods are carried to the sea or the river
to be bathed. Outside of Tenganan, geringsing are also
used in tooth filing ceremonies, to wrap around the
head, and for cremation purposes.
Narrow
cloths called geringsing sanan empeg ("broken yoke")
are worn by men when a brother has died. During their
ritually impure period of bereavement and its associated
rites, the cloths are thought to be instrumental in
protecting the wearer. It is noteworthy that the people
of Tenganan do not use geringsing to heal disease in
men and animals as is done on other parts of the island.
Instead, they use fragments of Indian double ikat which
are reputedly just as magical as geringsing. These cloths,
called pitola (also pato1a) sutra are woven of silk
and were traded to Indonesia for many centuries.
Holy
stripes and squares
When
the costly and precious geringsing and pitola weaves
are unavailable, luminous red cotton cepuk cloths may
be substituted. Cepuk is used in sacrifices, at cremations,
and above all as the protective cloth worn by Rangda
dancers. The centers of weaving were formerly Kerambitan
and Nusa Penida Island. Today, Tanglad on Nusa Penida
is the main production center for cepuk cloths, which
can be found in the bigger markets all over Bali, sold
together with other sacral textiles.
Sacred
hip and breast cloths with simple checkered patterns
(polengan) or small, circular fabrics (wangsul, gedogan)
are usually worn during rites of passage (especially
the three-month birthday, the 210 day birthday and for
tooth-filing ceremonies). They define the boundary between
the holy and the profane, often acting to shield human
beings from the impure, especially when appearing before
a priest or priestess to be blessed or to be cleansed.
The checkered poleng in particular is a symbol of the
underworld and is associated with demons and death.