Detail View: Museum and the Online Archive of California: Textile; hinggi; funeral shroud or man's ceremonial wrap. Indonesia

Collection: 
Museum and the Online Archive of California
Creation Place: 
East Sumba
Creation Place: 
Indonesia
Creation Place: 
Lesser Sundas
Title: 
Textile; hinggi; funeral shroud or man's ceremonial wrap. Indonesia
Date: 
1941
Materials: 
warp ikat
Materials: 
dyed
Materials: 
handwoven
Materials: 
cotton
Materials: 
textile
Dimensions: 
268.0 cm by 62.0 cm
Current Location: 
Fowler Museum of Cultural History. University of California, Los Angeles.
Address: 
Los Angeles, California 90095-1549
Object ID: 
UCLA FMCH X61.5
Subject: 
- shrimp tree animal geometric - warp ikat dyed handwoven cotton textile
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 complete "hinggi" consists of two identical panels sewn together lengthwise. The warp threads of the two panels are tied and dyed together, but must be woven separately due to the width limitations of the back tension loom. X61.5 and X61.6 are a matched pair of panels, which would be sewn together to make a complete "hinggi". Collected during the decade prior to World War II. Traditionally, multi-colored "hinggi" were the prerogative of noble clans. They served as clan heirlooms and were exchanged with allied clans at marriages and funerals. They were worn by men at ceremonial occasions and used as funeral shrouds. However, this cloth was collected during the "Expansion Period", 1913-1942 [Adams 1969:96], when production increased to meet the demands of external trade. It evidences features characteristic of this period, such as simplified motifs and the absence of specialized finishing techniques. The major motif band has alternating shrimp and tree motifs. Other motifs include horses, buffalo(?), roosters(?) and small snakes.
Heading: 
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Notes: 
Adams, Marie Jeanne. 1969. SYSTEM AND MEANING IN EAST SUMBA TEXTILE DESIGN. Cultural Report Series #16, Southeast Asia Studies, Yale University.
Collection Description: 
METS ID: 
ark:/13030/ft4f59n914