Media Information

 
 
 
Collection:
Museum and the Online Archive of California
Creation Place:
Bali
Creation Place:
Indonesia
Title:
Textile; sarong; man's clothing. Indonesia
Date:
Collected 1930s
Materials:
woven
Materials:
silk
Materials:
fabric
Dimensions:
196.0 cm by 58.5 cm
Current Location:
Fowler Museum of Cultural History. University of California, Los Angeles.
Address:
Los Angeles, California 90095-1549
Object ID:
UCLA FMCH X74.319
Subject:
- plaid
- woven silk fabric
Heading:
Content/Description
Notes:
REMARKS COMPILED IN 1987 BY ROY HAMILTON ON BASIS OF EXISTING RECORDS, EXAMINATION OF OBJECT, AND REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE: A length of cloth intended to be made into a sarong by cutting it in half and sewing the two pieces together selvage to selvage, then sewing the ends closed to make a tube. The "kepala" (= "head") then forms a single vertical section of contrasting pattern, in this case a plaid with a purple ground. Commercial dyes on silk. This plaid style of everyday sarong, usually worn by men, is pan-Indonesian and generally associated with coastal Islamic populations; not an indigenous Balinese style. This style, while still seen in Bali, would be considered conservative or out of fashion, compared to the weft ikat sarongs that became popular wear beginning in the 1970s.
Collection Description:
METS ID:
ark:/13030/ft496nb2j m

Textile; sarong; man's clothing. Indonesia