ART
AND ARTIST
Everybody
in Bali seems to be an artist. Coolies and, princes,
priests and peasants, men and women alike, can dance,
play musical instruments, paint, or carve in wood and
stone. It was often surprising to discover that an otherwise
poor and dilapidated village harbored an elaborate temple,
a great orchestra, or a group' of actors of repute.
One
of the most famous orchestras in Bali is to be found
in the, remote mountain village of Selat, and the finest
dancers of legong were in Saba, an unimportant little
village bidden. among the rice fields. Villages such
as Mas, Baiuan, Gelgel, are made up of families of painters,
sculptors, and actors, and Sanur produces, besides priests
and witcb-doctors, fine story-tellers and dancers. In
Sebatu, another isolated mountain village, even the
children can carve little statues from odd bits of wood,
some to be used as bottle-stoppers, perches for birds,
handles, but most often simply absurd little human figures
in comic attitudes, strange animals, birds of their
own invention, frogs, snakes, larvae of insects, figures
without reason or purpose, simply as an outlet for.
their creative urge. In contrast to the devil-may-care
primitive works of Sebatu are the super-refined, masterful
carvings from Badung, Ubud, Pliatan, and especially
those by the family of young Brahmanas from Mas who
turn out intricate statues of hard wood or with equal
ability paint a picture, design a temple gate, or act
and dance.
Painting,sculpture, and playing on musical instruments
are arts by tradition reserved to the men, but almost
any woman can weave beautiful stuffs and it is curious
that the most intriguing textiles, those in which the
dyeing and weaving process is so complicated that years
of labour are required to, complete a scarf, are made
by the women of Tmganan, an ancient village of six hundred
souls who are so conservative that they will not maintain
connections with the rest of Bali and who punish with
exile who ever dares to marry outside the village.
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If you are interested in this topic, we have
a complete art tours just for you. We will take
you to where extraordinary arts, paintings,
sculptures are made or if you have other ideas,
we can design the tour just for you. There are
also lessons in carving and paitings and about
balinese art
Please
sent us an email to Lisa
for more information about this package
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The
main artistic activity of the women goes into the making
of beautiful offerings for. the gods. These are intricate
structures of cut-out palm leaf, or pyramids of fruit,
flowers, cakes, and cat even roast chickens, arranged
with splendid taste, masterpieces of composition in
which the relative form of the elements: employed, their
-texture and color are taken into consideration. I have
seen monuments, seven feet in height, made ~ entirely,
of roasted pig's meat on skewers, decorated into shapes
cut out, of the waxy fat of the pig and surmounted with
banners and little umbrellas of the lacy stomach tissues,
the whole relieved by the vivid vermilion of chili peppers.
Although women of all ages have always taken part in
the ritual offering dances, in olden times only little
girls became dancers and actresses-, but today beautiful
girls take part in theatrical performances, playing
the parts of princesses formerly performed exclusively
by female impersonators.
The
effervescence of, artistic activity and the highly developed
aesthetic sense of the population can perhaps be explained
by a natural urge to express themselves, combined with
the important factor of leisure' resulting from well-organized
agricultural cooperatism. However, the most important
element for the development of a popular culture, with
primitive as well as refined characteristics, was perhaps
the fact that the Balinese did not permit the centralization
of the artistic knowledge in a special intellectual
class. In old Balinese books on ethics, like the Niti
Sastra, it is stated that a man who is ignorant of the
writings is like a man who has lost his speech, because
he shall have to remain silent during the conversation
of other men. Furthermore, it was a requirement for
the education of every prince that he should know mythology,
history, and poetry well enough; should learn painting,
woodcarving, music, and the making of musical instruments;
should be able to dance and tosing in Kawi, the classic
language of literature. There is hardly a prince who
does not possess a good number of these attributes,
and those deprived of talent themselves support artists,
musicians, and actors as part of their retinue. Ordinary
people look upon their feudal lords as models of conduct
and do not' hesitate to imitate them,learning their
poetry, dancing, painting, and carving in order to be
like them.
Thus,
not only the aristocracy can create informal beauty,
but a commoner may be as finished an artist as the educated
nobleman, although he may be an agriculturist, a tradesman,
or even a coolie. Our host in Bali was a prince and
a musician, but there were others of the common class
who were among the finest musicians of the neighbourhood.
Of the leaders of the famous orchestras of our district,
one was a coolie, another a goldsmith, and a third a
chauffeur.
Until
a few years ago the Balinese did not paint pictures
or' make statues without some definite purpose. It has
often been stated that there are no words in the Balinese
language for 919 art " and " artist."
This is true and logical; making a beautiful offering,
and carving a stone temple gate, and making a set of
masks are tasks of equal aesthetic importance, and although
the artist is regarded as a preferred member of the
community, there is no separate class of artists, and
a sculptor is simply a " carver " or a figure-maker,
and the painter is a picture-maker. A dancer is a legong,
a dancer, and so forth - the names of the dances they
perform.
The
artist is in Bali essentially a craftsman and at the
same time an amateur, casual and anonymous, who uses
his talent knowing that no one will care to record his
name for posterity. His only aim is to serve his community,
seeing that the work is well done when he is called
to embellish the temple of the village, or when he carves
his neighbour's gate in exchange for a new roof or some
other similar service. Actors and musicians play for
the feasts of the village without pay, and when they
perform for private festivals they are lavishly entertained
and banqueted instead.
Foreigners
have to pay a good amount for a performance: from five
to thirty guilders according to the quality of the show
and the pretensions of the actors; but a Balinese who
calls the village's orchestra or a troupe of actors
for a home festival provides special food, refreshments,
sirih, and cigarettes for them. If he pays a small amount
besides, from a guilder to five, it is not considered
as remuneration, but rather as a present to help the
finances of the musical or theatrical club. Whatever
money they receive goes to the funds of the association
to cover the expenses of the feasts given by the club
to buy new costumes or instruments.
Nothing
in Bali is made for posterity; the only available stone
is a soft sandstone that crumbles away after a few years,
and the temples and relief's have to be renewed constantly;
white ants devour the wooden sculptures, and the humidity
rots away all paper and cloth, so their arts have never
suffered from fossilization. The Balinese are extremely
proud of their traditions, but they are also progressive
and un conservative, and when a foreign idea strikes
their fancy, they adopt it with great enthusiasm as
their own. All sorts of influences from the outside,
Indian, Chinese, Javanese, have left their mark on Balinese
art, but they are always translated into their own manner
and they become strongly Balinese in the process.
Thus
the lively Balinese art is in constant flux. What becomes
the rage for a while may be suddenly abandoned and forgotten
when a new fashion is invented, new styles in music
or in the theatre, or new ways of making sculptures
and paintings. But the traditional art also remains,
and when the artists tire of a new idea, they go back
to the classic forms until a new style is again invented.
They are great copyists and it is not surprising to
find in a temple, as part of the decoration, a fat Chinese
god or a scene representing a highway hold-up, or a
crashing plane, events unknown in Bali that can only
be explained as having been copied from some Western
magazine. Once a young Balinese painter saw my friend
Walter Spies painting yellow highlights on the tips
of the leaves of a jungle scene. He went home and made
a painting that was thoroughly Balinese, but with modeling
and highlights until then unknown in Balinese painting.
Artistic property cannot exist in the communal Balinese
culture; if an artist invents or copies something that
is an interesting novelty, soon all the others are reproducing
the new find. Once a sculptor made a little statue representing
the larvae of an insect standing upright on its tail;
a few weeks later everybody was making them and soon
the statue market was flooded with Brancusi-like little
erect worms on square bases.
Unlike the individualistic art of the West in which
the main concern of the artist, is to develop his personality
in order to create an easily recognizable style as the
means to attain his ultimate goal - recognition and
fame - the anonymous artistic production of the Balinese,
like their entire life, is the expression of collective
thought. A piece of music or sculpture is often the
work of two or more artists, and the pupils of a painter
or a sculptor invariably collaborate with their master.
The Balinese artist builds up with traditional standard
elements. The arrangement and the general spirit may
be his own, and there may even be a certain amount of
individuality, however subordinated to the local style.
There are definite proportions, standard features, peculiar
garments, and so forth to represent a devil, a holy
man, a prince, or a peasant, and the personality of
a given character is determined, not so much by physical
characteristics, but rather by sartorial details. The
romantic heroes, Arjuna, Rama, and Pandi, look exactly
alike and can only be recognized by the headdress peculiar
to each. A strong differentiation is made between "
fine " and " coarse " characters; Ardjuna,
for instance, is refined, with narrow eyes and delicate
features, while his brother, the warrior Bhima, has
wild round eyes and wears a moustache. He is further
identified by his chequeredloin cloth.
The
Balinese obtain their artistic standards of beauty from
ancient Java, and for centuries there has been only
one way to treat a beautiful face; which they have,
curiously enough, come to identify with themselves.
Once, discussing the facial characteristics of various
races with the Regent of Karangasem, a man of high Balinese
education, he asked me how I drew a Balinese.
He
disagreed with my conception and proceeded to draw one
himself, a face from the classic paintings and a type
that could not be found on the whole island. Within
these conventions, Balinese art is realistic without
being photographic -, that is, without attempting to
give the optical illusion of the real thing. Thus there
is no perspective and no modeling in painting and sculpture
is highly stylized. They admire technique and good craftsmanship
above other points, and when I showed Balinese friend
a beautiful sculpture I had just acquired, he found
fault with the minute parallel grooves that marked the
strands of hair because in places they ran together.
Balinese
art is not in the class of the great arts like great
Chinese painting - the conscious production of works
of art, for their own sake, with an aesthetic value
apart from their function. Again, it is too refined,
too developed, to fit into peasant arts nor is it one
of the primitive arts, those subject to ritual and.
Tribal laws, which we call " primitive " because
their aesthetics do, not conform to ours. Their art
is a highly developed, although in formal Baroque folk-art
that combines the peasant liveliness with the refinement
of the classicism of Hinduistic Java, but free of conservative
prejudice and with a new vitality fired by the exuberance
of the demoniac spirit of the tropical primitive. The
Balinese peasants took the flowery art of ancient Java,
itself -an offshoot of the aristocratic art of India
of the seventh and eighth centuries, brought it down
to earth, and made it popular property.
Although at the service of religion, Balinese art is
not a religious art. An artist carves ludicrous subjects
in the temples 'or embellishes objects of daily use
with religious symbols, using them purely as ornamental
elements regardless of their significance. The Balinese
carve or paint to tell the only 'stories they know -
those created by their intellectuals, the religious
teachers of former times.
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