ART
AND ARTIST
OLD
HINDU BALINESE ART
Already
in the records of Chinese travelers of the fifth century
it is mentioned that in tbe.country of Poli, perhaps
Bali, there were Hindu princes, and that the travellers
were received by priests who danced around them blowing
conch-shells. Bali was already a colony of the Central
Javanese kingdom of Mataram, the earliest recorded
ruler of which was, according to Stutterheim, King
Sandjaya or Sanjaya (A.D- 732) of the Sailendra dynasty,
who ruled also over southern Sumatra.
The
Sailendras where Mahayanic Buddhists, and their highly
developed art. was like that of the great Gupta period
of India. Sivaism was introduced towards the middle
of the ninth century and, by degrees, the power of
the Sailendras waned, but it was within this period,
from the seventh to the ninth centuries, the golden
age of Javanese art, that the finest monuments of
Java were built, the Buddhist Borobudur and the Sivaist
Lora Djongrang in Prambanan. Soon this great civilization
disappeared mysteriously and Bali came under the rule
of independent kings in Pedieng and Bedulu. From their
time we have remains of the classic style in the neighbourbood
of the present villages of the same names, some in
ruined temples, in caves, or among the ricefields,
in the strip of land between the rivers Pakrisan and
Petanu, where so many of the antiquities of Bali are
found. Towards the beginning of the eleventh century
there was a renaissance in East Java, in Kediri, brought
about by the Balinese-born king Erlangga. Under him
Bali became again an integral part of Java and classicism
received a new impetus. It was Erlangga who instituted
Javanese as the official language of Bali. Tantric
black magic seems to have played an important part
in Erlangga's time, and while be was having trouble
with his greatest political enemy, his own mother,
who bad sworn to destroy his kingdom by the black
arts, Erlangga's brother ruled Bali in his name. This
brother was buried (according to Stutterheim) in the
spectacular " Kings' tombs " in Gunung Kawi
near Tampaksiring.
Among
the important relics of the ancient period are the
following:
Gunung
Kawi: On the banks of the river Pakrisan, descending
a steep ravine, is a group of sober, undecorated monuments
shaped like the ancient burial towers (tiandif), hewn
out of the solid rock, each inside, of a niche, four
on one side and five on the other. To the right of
the main group is a sort of monastery with coves also
carved out of the rock, arranged around a central
ceil with a platform in the centre. The monuments
are supposed to belong to the eleventh century, when
cremation had not yet been introduced into Bali, and
Lekkerkerker thinks the cells were probably destined
to expose the corpses to be obliterated by decay and
wild animals, such as was the custom among Indonesians,
and as is still practiced in Sembiran in Bali and
by the Toradjas in Celebes, where it is now forbidden
by the Dutch. The monuments were only discovered in
io2o, but the Balincse knew them, and saw them with
reverence because they attributed them to the giant
of mythical times, Kbo Iwa', who is supposed to have
carved all the ancient monuments with his own fingernails.
The nativcs formerly called the tombs DiaM, but the
present placename, Gunung Kawi, means " mountain
of poetry " or " mountain of antiquity."
Bukit
Darrna: In Kutri near Bedulu there is another
antiquity of the classic period, also related to Erlangga.
It is the beautiful statue of Mabendradatta, Erlangga's
mother, as the goddess of death, Durga. It is preserved
in the sanctuary of Bukit Darma, which archaeologists
believe to be the burial site of Erlangga's mother.
The statue is badly worn, but it can still be seen
that it was of the purest classic lines.
Goa
Gajah: Together with Gunung Kawi, the best known
relic of the ancient art is the famous " Elephant
Cave " near Bedu'lu. Goa Gadja is a great hollowed
rock, perhaps the former residence of a hermit, elaborately
carved on the outside, covered with representations
of stylized rocks, forests, waves, animals, and people
running in panic because directly over the entrance
is the head of a great monster with bulging eyes who
splits the rock with his enormous fat hands. Nieuwenkamp
says that it may represent Pasupati, who divided the
mountain Mahameru into two parts and, taking them
in his hands, placed each half in Bali as the Gunung
Agung and the Batur. There are a number of ancient
stone water-spouts outside the cave, and on the inside
is a statue of Ganesa in a central niche, with a linga
on either side. The Goa Gadja dates also from the
eleventh century and perhaps receives the popular
name of " Ele. phant Cave " because of the
statue, inside, of the god Ganesa, shaped like an
elephant. But Goris attributes the name to the fact
that the river Petanu, which runs near the cave, was
called in old times Lwa Gadia, the " elephant
river." Elephants have never existed in Bali
and the elephant motifs that appear so frequently
in Balinese art were importations from India or Java.
As of Gunung Kawi, Kbo Iwi is also, according to popular
belief, the author of the cave. Other hermitages with
rock reliefs are the one near by called Toya PuM;
the Goa Racksas,a near-Ubud; Djakut Paku, both on
the river Oos (Uwos); and the caves near Kapal in
Badung.
Pedjeng:
In the ricefields approaching Pedieng there is a beautiful
stone water-spout in the shape of a youthful hermit
holding in his band a small human figure out of whose
body once issued a stream of water. Farther on, in
what appears to be the former site of a temple, are
scattered fragments of classic statues; an altar of
human skulls; the vague silhouette of a slim woman,
covered with damp moss, fallen and half buried. The
most complete statue is that of a wild raksasa crowned
with skulls and about to drink from a larger, stylized
human skull. In Pura Panataran Sasih, the temple where
the bronze drum is kept, there are a number of ancient
statues, the majority being commemorative statues
of former kings.
Panulisan:
In the ruins of pura PanUhS2n on the mountain of the
same name, are some fine statues of kings from the
eleventh century. The temple was destroyed by an earthquake
and despite the fact that it is regarded as of great
holiness, an extravagant stairway of cement has been
built to reach it, but the temple has not been repaired.
Today one may visit the ruins only with a written
permit from the local pungawa.
Other statues worthy of mention are the figures of
Durga inthe temple Pondjok Batu" on the road
to Tedjakula in North Bali and the great statue of
Dewa Ratu" Pantiering Diagat, over twelve feet
high, the largest statue in Bali, kept jealously out
of
sight in the tower (meru) of the temple Trunyan, a
-Bali Aga village on the eastern sbore of Lake Batur.
The statue is considered very old and is held to have
magic power. No one is allowed even to go into the
tower, unless it is the selected " virgin "
boys (truna) of the village, who on certain dates
clean and paint the statue with a mixture of chalk,
honey, and water, accompanied by elaborate carefully
observed ceremonials. A excellent description of this
interesting feast has been written by Walter Spies
in " Das Grosse Fest auf Trunjan " (see
Bibliography). The ancient Balinese also left a number
of ancient bronzes cast by the cire perdue process,
some in the form of plates with inscriptions, drums,
and little statues of deities and kings, some classic
in style like the beautiful ones found in Java, others
of a more primitive, perhaps local style. All of these
antiquities are not in museums, but are still the
property of the people, kept in the temples and honored
because of their antiquity, brought out of their wrappings
once a year on the occasion of the temple feast of
the village.
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