ART
AND ARTIST
THE
PLASTIC ARTS IN MODERN BALI
Sculpture
and Architecture: The primary function of the average
sculptor is to enhance the public buildings of his community
with florid decoration and judging from the profusion
of such carved temple and palace walls, gates, drum-towers,
public baths,
court houses, and so forth, seen even in the remotest
districts, one comes to the conclusion that there must
be an enormous number of sculptors in Bali. Domestic
architecture is simply of wood and, thatch with secondary
walls, undecorated for the most part, and is the concern
of carpenters and tbatcb-workers. Formerly the vassals
of the feudal princes built great palaces for them,
many of which are still among. the finest examples of
Balinese architecture, but today the artistic activity
of the people goes into the care of their places, of
worshiZ and other communal buildings, still erected
and repaired with great intensity.
In
Bali there is no special class of architects, and the
sculptors are in charge of designing, directing, and
even working themselves in the construction of a temple,
assisted by a number of stone- and brick-workers. A
master carver should be able to plan beautiful gates,
which are the most important examples of Balinese architecture.
In Mas, a village of Brahmanas, we saw once an architectural
drawing, rather resembling our architectural proiects-
for a temple gate to be erected in the village. The
drawing was made by Ida Bagus Ktut, carver, actor, and
musician, member of a who'le family of artists; the
position and shape of the stones and the carvings on
what was to be in sandstone were drawn in great detail
on European paper with black ink, with the parts to
be made of brick painted red. I believe, however, that
this drawing was exceptional, and usually the work is
started without a drawn plan. For the making of the
great towers for cremation, for example., the master
builder simply has the design and the proportions already
worked out., 'as the Balinese say, in his belly.
The
only stone to be found in the island is a soft sandstone,
a conglomerate of volcanic ash called paras, quarried
on the banks of rivers. The stone appears to be softer
when freshly taken from the ground and becomes harder
with time under favourable conditions. Dr. Stutterbeim
claims that the stone was protected in Qld times by
a coating of cement, but I bad no occasion to verify
this and I never found evidence of such cement being
used by the present-day Balinese. It is perhaps the
softness ' of this, the only stone in Bali, that is
responsible for the over-intricate art of the Balinese,
making it possible for them to give full vent to their
nafve delight in covering all available space with decoration.
The stone is cut and shaped with adzes, directly on
the spot where it is quarried, and made.into blocks
of various sizes according to requirements. For the
large statues of demons that guard the entrance of temples,
the great block of paras is roughly shaped to resemble
its ultimate form, and when it is considered that enough
surplus stone has been removed, it is carried to its
destination on stretchers of bamboo - not an easy task,
since the quarries are generally at the bottom of deep
ravines. I have seen as many as fifteen men struggling
up a narrow and slippery path with a great block of
stone. The schematic mass of the future devil is placed
where it is to remain a, d is finished on the site.
The blocks of stone for construction are put together
without mortar, but it is essential for the stability
of the building that the joints should have a perfect
fit. This is accomplished by rubbing the two stones
together, wearing their surfaces down
with great quantities of water. The same process is
employed"to join baked brick. In this manner the
building rises slowly, the workmen protected from the
sun by shades made of the woven leaves of the coconut
palm and a considerable period of time often elapses
before a new temple is finished. The alternate masses
of red brick and sandstone are carved last, often leaving
the roughly shaped masses of stone for years without
decoration.
The
stone-carvers follow definite rules when they begin
to cover a temple or a palace gate with decoration.
For instance, there should be a karang tiewiri over
the gate, the face of a leering monster with a hanging
tongue and long canines. On less important spots the
central motif of a pattern is a karang bintulu, a curiously
popular design consisting of a single bulging eye over
a row of upper teeth, the canines of which are developed
into fangs, surmounted by the representation of a mountain.
To finish a corner there is a special motif, a karang
titiring, the upper part of a bird's beak, also provided,
with a single eye and pointed teeth. For the same purpose
there is a variation of this same motif, a karang asti,
the jawless head of an elephant. The word karang means
a reef, a rock, but it also is the word for setting
jewels or for a flower arrangement. It has been attempted
to give these ornaments an esoteric religious meaning
(according to Nieuwenkamp), the representation of the
souls of inanimate objects - rocks, mountains, plants
- of which they form a part; when a Balinese was pressed
to explain why they did not have lower jaws, he replied
that it was because they did not have to eat solid food
This is, in my opinion , a typical Balinese wise crack
and not an indication of any such symbolical meaning.
These
motifs are the starting-point for the intricate volutes,
leaves, flowers, flaming motifs, and so forth, strongly
reminiscent of those used in ancient Java, but also
found in Siam, Cambodia, and even in the objects of
the Dyaks of Borneo, a people uninfluenced by Hinduistic
art. All-over patterns are called karang, while the
carved borders in the mouldings are named patra, of
which there is a patra olanda (from the Portuguese word
for Holland?) and a patra tiin2, a " Chinese border."
Here and there small panels are carved with representations
of episodes from their literature: animals from the
t2ntri stories, the Balinese,AESOP's fables; suggestive
scenes from the Ardiuna Wiwaha in which the nymphs of
heaven make passionate love to Ardjuna while he is in
deep meditation; or a battle from the Ramayana or Mahabharata,
with comic scenes in which the retainers of the heroes,
the clowns Twailen and D61am, wrestle and bite each
other.
The
Southern style of architecture (Badung, Gianyar, Tabanan,
Bangli, Klungkung) is characterized by masses of red
brick relieved by intricately carved ornaments in grey
sandstone in a considerably more restrained style than
that of the North of the island (Buleleng) , where it
breaks out into a gaudy riot of gingerbread decoration
in a stone so soft that travellers have mistaken it
for sun-dried mud. The gates of a North Balinese temple
are tall and slender, with a flaming, ascendant tendency
as if trying to liberate themselves from the smothering
maze of sculptured leaves and flowers, out of which
peer, here and there, grotesque faces and blazing demons,
their shape almost lost in the flames that emanate from
their bodies.
The
North Balinese take their temples lightly and often
use the wall spaces as a sort of comic strip, covering
them with openly humorous subjects: a motor-car held
up by a two-gun bandit, seen undoubtedly in some American
Western in the movie house of Buleleng; a mechanic trying
to repair the breakdown of a car full of long-bearded
Arabs; two fat Hollanders drinking beer; a soldier raping
a girl; or a man on a bicycle with two great flowers
for wheels. Fantastic pornographic subjects are always
a source of hilarious comedy and in many temples in
both North and South Bali such subjects are found as
temple decorations. As if the mad tangle of stone vegetation
were not enough, in North Bali they outline the decorations
with white paint to make them even more conspicuous,
and in villages like Babetin, Ringdikit, and Diagaraga
the overpowering decoration is painted in bright blue,
red, and yellow, giving as a result the wildest and
most unrestrained effects.
The
art of wood-carving has suffered a curious transformation
since our first visit to Bali in 193o. Then the majority
of the objects carved in wood were made for utilitarian
purposes: from carved doors and beams for houses, musical
instruments, masks for dramatic shows, handles for implements,
to little statues of deities and other ritual accessories.
These were of the conventional contemporary Balinese
style: flowers and curlicues in high relief for flat
surfaces (http://www.putritour.com/spacer.gif) , and for sculpture in the round (http://www.putritour.com/spacer.gif),
statues of divinities, demons, and other characters
of mythology dressed in classical attire and profusely
ornamented. Furthermore, all wood-carvings were meant
to be covered with paint, lacquer, or goldleaf and only
in exceptional cases was the wood left in its raw state.
There were unusual pieces, but they were freaks among
the predominant styles.
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Travellers
had started to buy Balinese carvings, however, and on
our return to Bali three years later, the Balinese sculptors
were turning out mass-production " objets d'art
" for tourists. Even before arriving in Bali for
the second time, we found the curioshops of Macassar
and Java filled with statuettes of a decidedly commercial
style which was totally new to us. Before this we had
made acquaintance with Gusti Ngurah Gede', an old man
of Pemetjutan rated among the best sculptors of South
Bali. Although Gusti Ged6 was so old that he talked
with difficulty, be could carve the most delicate motifs
in hard wood with a precision and sureness envied by
the younger. sculptors. He had started to make realistic
little statues of nude girls, bathing, combing their
hair, or in the process of undressing, masterfully carved
out of a fine-grained white wood, figures that found
ready sale among travellers. This was perhaps the beginning
of a new art in which the sculptor began working for
a new public: tourists who had little appreciation of
the technical perfection demanded by the Balinese, or
foreign a ritists who preferred line and form to intricate
ornamentation.
This
necessarily introduced the mercenary element into Balinese
art, until then non-existent; prices were boosted and
the sculptor suddenly became aware thaf'there was a
good income in making statues. On the other hand, this
same condition gave
the art a new impulse, and sculptors sprang up like
mushrooms. Soon every important artistic centre,. such
as Den Pasar, Mas, Batuan, Pliatan, and Ubud, was turning
out quantities of carv ings in new styles, mediocre
heads of dianger.dancers snatched up by round-the-world
tourists, stereotyped slim figures from Mas exported
to Java and Holland; while, the splendid sculptors from
Badung and Batuan carved coconut shells from Bangli
and so forth.
Custi
Gede' was also the master of a school of sculptors and
every morning boys from the town went to his house to
receive lessons and to assist him. Some of.his pupils
were already fine carvers and could turn out statues
almost as finished as those of the master. In'his school
we had the opportunity to observe the technique of wood-ta'rving,
which is considerably more refined and requires greater
skill than the carvings in pargs stone. Hard woods such
, as teak (diati) , jackfruit (nangka) , and the compact
sawo, a beautiful dark red wood, are invariably used
and the sculptor must have a sure hand, trained by the
experience of years,'and , a, good knowledge of the
art of cutting into the grain of the wood. He uses every
conceivable form of knives, chisels, and gouges: round,
straight, slanting, V-shaped, and so forth, some of
which are intended for exceptionally deep carving. A
complete set of tools consists of some thirty instruments
and a wooden mallet. The carving technique consists
in chipping bits of wood gradually with the highly sharpened
instruments, not by band pressure, as among us, but
with light taps of the mallet, obtaining -in this manner
delicacy of touch and greater control over the material.
If the statue is not to be painted or gilded, it is
made smooth with pumice and given a high polish by rubbing
it with bamboo.
Painting:
Unlike the arts of the theatre, music, and sculpture,
painting was little in evidence as a living art on our
first visit to Bali. Outside of painting artifacts of
daily use and scant decorations for temples, the Balinese
made only paintings of two sorts: ide rider, strips
of hand-made cotton a foot made by some fifteen or twenty
feet long, hung at festivals under the roofs, all around
the pavilions in houses and temples; and langs6, wide
pieces of painted cloth used as hangings or curtains.
There were often calendars (pelelintangan) used to establish
the horoscopes of children, divided into squares with
symbolical designs, one for each of the thirty-five
days of, the month. Often the paintings represented
scenes of mythology, episodes and battles from the literary
epics; but there were seldon't scenes from daily life
and never of contemporary subjects. The characters shown
were invariably gods, devils, 'princes, and 'princesses
with their retain-ersi dressed in the ancient costumes
of Hindu-Javanese times.
Their
attitudes were stilted and the subjects standardized,
but at times the restricted artist found an episode
where he could give vent to his drotic sense of humour
and he took good advantage of a. love scene or a mishap
to one of the retainers of the heroes. Erotic paintings
were met With at times, scenes of fantastic attitudes
in love-making, which they assured me would prevent
the house where they were kept from burning!
Only
the old paintings showed skill and taste; the modem
ones sold at the, lobby of the Bali Hotel were coarse,
hastily made, and with a sad poverty of subject-matter.
Painting was at a standstill, no longer in demand from,
the Balinese themselves and suffering from lack of freedom
of expression. Only rarely did we find pictures with
style, but, the reason for this was the systematic and
mechanical manner in which they were made; a master
painter drew the main outline's and gave the final touches,
leaving his children and apprentices to fill in the
colours. Once in Gelgel, centre of painters of "the
conventional style, the two children of a painter had
a heated argument because one had painted with blue
the flesh parts of a figure and insisted he was right.
The
following are among the invariable rules to be followed
by painters of the conservative style: all available
space must -be covered by the design, even to the blank
spaces between the
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