BALI ARTS
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Bali Map |
The richness of Bali’s arts and crafts has its origin in the fertility of the land. The purest forms are the depictions of Dewi Sri, the rice goddess, intricately made from dried and folded strips of palm leaf to ensure that the fertility of the rice fields continues. Until the tourist invasion, the acts of painting or carving were purely to decorate temples and shrines and to enrich ceremonies. Today, with galleries and craft shops everywhere, paintings are stacked up on their floors and you trip over stone- or woodcarvings. Much of it is churned out quickly, but you will still find a great deal of beautiful work Balinese dance, music and wayang kulit (a leather puppet used in shadow puppet plays) performances are one of the reasons that Bali is much more than just a beach destination. The artistry on display here will stay with you long after you’ve moved on from the island. On Lombok you can find excellent crafts, including pottery in villages such as Banyumulek. There are many shops and galleries with good items in Mataram and Senggigi
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legong dance |
Dance
You
can catch a quality dance performance in Bali anywhere there’s a
festival or celebration, and you’ll find exceptional performances in and
around Ubud. Enjoying this purely Balinese form of art is reason enough
to visit and no visit is complete without this quintessential Bali
experience. To see good Balinese dance on a regular basis, you’ll want
to spend some time in Ubud. For an idea of what’s on. Performances
typically take place at night and although choreographed with the short
attention spans of tourists in mind they can last two hours or more.
Absorb the hypnotic music and the alluring moves of the performers and
the hours will, er, dance past. Admission to dances is generally around
50,000Rp. Music, theatre and dance courses are available in Ubud, where
private teachers advertise instruction in various of the Balinese
instruments. For a perspective on the state of dance in Bali today from
one of its top dancers, see the boxed text. Many tourist shows in South
Bali hotels offer a smorgasbord of dances –a little Kecak, a taste of
Legong and some Barong to round it off. Some of these performances can
be pretty abbreviated with just a few musicians and
a
couple of dancers. Balinese love a blend of seriousness and slapstick,
and this shows in their dances. Some have a decidedly comic element,
with clowns who convey the story and also act as a counterpoint to the
staid, noble characters. Most dancers are not professionals. Dance is
learned by performing, and carefully following the movements of an
expert. It tends to be precise, jerky, shifting and jumpy, remarkably
like Balinese music, with its abrupt changes of tempo and dramatic
contrasts between silence and crashing noise. There’s little of the
soaring leaps or the smooth flowing movements of Western dance. Every
movement of wrist, hand and fingers is charged with meaning; and facial
expressions are carefully choreographed to convey the character of the
dance. Watch the local children cheer the good characters and cringe
back from the stage when the demons appear.
Kecak
Probably
the best known of the dances, the Kecak has a ‘choir’ of men who
provide the ‘chak-a-chak-a-chak’ accompaniment, imitating a troupe of
monkeys. In the 1960s, the tourist version of Kecak developed. This is
easily found in Ubud and also at the Pura Luhur Ulu Watu. Kecak dances
tell a tale from the Ramayana, one of the great Hindu holy books, about
Prince Rama and his Princess Sita. The evil Rawana, King of Lanka, lures
Rama away with a golden deer (Lanka’s equally evil prime minister, who
has magically changed himself into a deer). Then, when the princess is
alone, he pounces and carries her off to his hideaway. Hanuman, the
white monkey-god, tells Princess Sita that Rama is trying to rescue her
and gives her Rama’s ring. When Rama arrives he is met by the evil
king’s evil son, Megananda, who shoots an arrow that magically turns
into a snake and ties Rama up. Fortunately, he is able to call upon a
Garuda (mythical man-bird creature) who helps him escape. Finally,
Sugriwa, the king of the monkeys, comes with his monkey army and, after a
great battle, good wins out over evil and Rama and Sita return home.
Throughout the dance the chanting is superbly synchronised with an
eerily exciting coordination. Add in the actors posing as an army of
monkeys and you have unbeatable spectacle. Barong & Rangda This
rivals the Kecak as Bali’s most popular dance for tourists. Again it’s a
battle between good (the Barong) and bad (the Rangda).
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kecak dance |
The
Barong is a strange but good, mischievous and fun-loving shaggy
dog-lion. The widowwitch Rangda is bad through and through. The story
begins with Barong Keket, the most holy of the Barong, enjoying the
acclaim of its supporters – a group of men with kris (traditional
daggers). Then Rangda appears, her long tongue lolling, terrible fangs
protruding from her mouth, human entrails draped around her neck, and
pendulous parodybreasts. (In fully authentic versions – which are rarely
seen by visitors – the
Rangda
is covered with real entrails from freshly slaughtered animals.) The
Barong and Rangda duel, and the supporters draw their kris and rush in.
The Rangda throws them into a trance that makes them stab themselves.
But the Barong dramatically casts a spell that stops the kris from
harming them. They rush back and forth, waving their kris, rolling on
the ground, desperately trying to stab themselves. It’s all a conspiracy
to terrify tourists in the front row! Finally, the terrible Rangda
retires and good has triumphed again. The entranced Barong supporters,
however, still need to be sprinkled with holy water. Playing around with
all that powerful magic, good and bad, is not to be taken lightly. A
pesmangku (priest for temple rituals) must end the dancers’ trance and a
chicken must be sacrificed after the dance to propitiate the evil
spirits. Legong This most graceful of Balinese dances is performed by
young girls. It is important in Balinese culture that in old age a
classic dancer will be remembered as a ‘great Legong’. Peliatan’s famous
dance troupe, often seen in Ubud, is particularly noted for its Legong
Keraton (Legong of the Palace). The very stylised and symbolic story
involves two Legong dancing in mirror image. They are dressed in gold
brocade, their faces elaborately made up, their eyebrows plucked and
repainted, and their hair decorated with frangipani. The dance relates
how a king takes a maiden, Rangkesari, captive. When her brother comes
to release her, Rangkesari begs the king to free her rather than go to
war. The king refuses and on his way to the battle meets a bird with
tiny golden wings bringing ill omens. He ignores the bird and continues
on, meets Rangkesari’s brother and is killed.
Sanghyang
These dances were developed to drive out evil spirits from a village –
Sanghyang is a divine spirit who temporarily inhabits an entranced
dancer. The Sanghyang Dedari is performed by two young girls who dance a
dream-like version of the Legong in perfect symmetry while their eyes
are firmly shut. Male and female choirs provide a background chant until
the dancers slump to the ground. A pesmangku blesses them with holy
water and brings them out of the trance. The modern Kecak dance
developed from the Sanghyang. In the Sanghyang Jaran, a boy in a trance
dances around and through a fire of coconut husks, riding a coconut palm
‘hobby horse’. Variations of this are called Kecak Fire Dance (or Fire
and Trance Dance for tourists) and are performed in Ubud almost daily.
Other Dances The warrior dance, the Baris, is a male equivalent of the
Legong – grace and femininity give way to energetic and warlike spirit.
The Baris dancer must convey the thoughts and emotions of a warrior
first preparing for action, and then meeting the enemy, showing his
changing moods through facial expression and movement – chivalry, pride,
anger, prowess and, finally, regret. It is one of the most complex of
dances requiring great energy and skill. The Ramayana ballet tells the
familiar tale of Rama and Sita but with a gamelan gong accompaniment. It
provides plenty of opportunity for improvisation and comic additions.
The giant puppet dances known as Barong Landung take place annually on
the island of Serangan and a few other places in southern Bali. The
legend relates how the demon Jero Gede Macaling popped over from Nusa
Penida, disguised as a standing Barong, to cause havoc in Bali. A huge
Barong puppet was made to scare him away. The dance, often highly
comical, features two gigantic puppet figures – a horrific male image of
black Jero Gede and his female sidekick, white Jero Luh. In the Topeng,
which means ‘Pressed Against the Face’, as with a mask, the dancers
imitate the character represented by the mask. The Topeng Tua is a
classic solo dance where the mask is that of an old man. In other dances
there may be a small troupe who perform various characters. A full
collection of Topeng masks may number 30 or 40. Mask dances require
great expertise because the dancer cannot convey thoughts and meanings
through facial expressions – the dance has to tell all. Dance in Bali is
not a static art form. The Oleg Tambulilingan was developed in the
1950s, originally as a solo female dance. Later, a male part was added
and the dance now mimics the flirtations of two tambulilingan
(bumblebees). You may often see the Pendet being danced by women
bringing offerings to a temple. One of the most popular comic dances is
the Cupak, which tells of a greedy coward (Cupak) and his brave but
hard-done-by younger brother, and their adventures while rescuing a
beautiful princess. Drama Gong is based on the same romantic themes as a
Balinese soap opera – long and full of high drama.