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Ikat from West Timor, Timor, Indonesia
 

031 Timor, West Timor


Tais (sarong)



Locale: Malaka, Tetun people
Period: 1930-1950
Panels: 3
Design: Central field decorated with anthropomorphic and zoomorphic figures in white on indigo. The lozenge-shaped motif represents a crocodile. The one-eyed human figure has a wide distribution in the archipelago and is probably ancient. The oppositional placement of human figures with heads (nearly) touching is found in various parts of western Timor, but probably most common in Amanuban and Amanatun.
Size: 110 x 129 cm (43.3 x 50.7 in)
Weight: 615 g (217 g/m2)
Yarn: Cotton, hand-spun, medium
Comment: All natural dyes except a few pinstripes in red, yellow and green silk, letros, a few threads wide. Made by a weaver with strong hands, as betrayed by the clear delineation of motifs and the absence of capillary seepage of the indigo. Ex collection August Flick.
Background: Additional information in chapters on Timor and West Timor.
Published: Ikat Textiles of the Indonesian Archipelago, 2018.
Timor: Totems and Tokens, 2019.
Sources: Very similar in terms of overall structure down to the narrow ikated bands, to Malaka tais in Yeager and Jacobson, Textiles of Western Timor, Plate 230. Similar stylisation of crocodile in Fig. 47L. Human figures similar to some of those in Fig. 46.
  
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