1983.134 Headhunter's jacket (baju kirai)


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
The back of this jacket (or war vest) displays several rows of figures and designs. The figures represent a pairing of the protective deity Indu Dara Tinchin Temaga, the daughter of the god of war, and a kneeling male. Between the two figures hangs a prize in the shape of a dangling pendant containing a cross, the symbol of a trophy head. The geometric bands below the figures are “seeds” or “fruits,” also symbols for numerous trophies that signaled the bravery and success of this warrior. It is fitting that such powerful imagery covers the back of a jacket as this is the warrior’s most vulnerable spot.

When this jacket was collected around 1970, it was already six generations old. According to informants, the original owner killed two foes in hand-to-hand combat and captured four slaves (ulon), whom he treated kindly as if they were his own children.

Excerpt from
Roslyn A. Walker, Label text, 2013.

NOTES
1984: Selections from SGA Indonesian Textiles Collection exhibition

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography

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Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
1980: Steven G. Alpert, Dallas, Texas, collected at Entawau longhouse, Rajang River [1]

1983: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from above [2]

Notes:
The main source for this provenance is the Pacific American Corp. document titled "Dallas Museum of Art: The Steven G. Alpert Collection of Indonesian Textiles" in the Collections Records file labeled Steven G. Alpert—Indonesian Textiles. Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.

[1] The jacket was collected from the weaver Dewou or Dewow, and the succession of inheritance reads: Dewou, Awang ak Dewou, Janda ak Awang, Bol ak Janda, Sangou ak Bol, Lekon ak Sango. Lekon, the last owner, was in his 50s in 1980. The following was related to Steven G. Alpert from Lekon (a conversation in Malay related in the notes in English): "...The jacket of eight Gaji Antu (giant ghosts) for battle against the Kayan. Awang brought eight Kayan children as slaves to his house where he treated them very kindly after killing their parents in battle...This was during the reign of the first Raja, James Brooke, who soon after began to suppress headhunting."

[2] See pages 1-4 of the correspondence between Harry S. Parker and Pacific American Corp. dated October 5, 1983, in the Collections Records file labeled Steven G. Alpert—Indonesian Textiles.

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  • Wikipedia~Learn more about the Iban people. 

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General Description
 
The back of this jacket (or war vest) displays several rows of figures and designs. The figures represent a pairing of the protective deity Indu Dara Tinchin Temaga, the daughter of the god of war, and a kneeling male. Between the two figures hangs a prize in the shape of a dangling pendant containing a cross, the symbol of a trophy head. The geometric bands below the figures are “seeds” or “fruits,” also symbols for numerous trophies that signaled the bravery and success of this warrior. It is fitting that such powerful imagery covers the back of a jacket as this is the warrior’s most vulnerable spot.

When this jacket was collected around 1970, it was already six generations old. According to informants, the original owner killed two foes in hand-to-hand combat and captured four slaves (ulon), whom he treated kindly as if they were his own children.

Excerpt from
Roslyn A. Walker, Label text, 2013.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 
  • Wikipedia~Learn more about the Iban people. 

Notes
1984: Selections from SGA Indonesian Textiles Collection exhibition

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
1980: Steven G. Alpert, Dallas, Texas, collected at Entawau longhouse, Rajang River [1]

1983: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from above [2]

Notes:
The main source for this provenance is the Pacific American Corp. document titled "Dallas Museum of Art: The Steven G. Alpert Collection of Indonesian Textiles" in the Collections Records file labeled Steven G. Alpert—Indonesian Textiles. Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.

[1] The jacket was collected from the weaver Dewou or Dewow, and the succession of inheritance reads: Dewou, Awang ak Dewou, Janda ak Awang, Bol ak Janda, Sangou ak Bol, Lekon ak Sango. Lekon, the last owner, was in his 50s in 1980. The following was related to Steven G. Alpert from Lekon (a conversation in Malay related in the notes in English): "...The jacket of eight Gaji Antu (giant ghosts) for battle against the Kayan. Awang brought eight Kayan children as slaves to his house where he treated them very kindly after killing their parents in battle...This was during the reign of the first Raja, James Brooke, who soon after began to suppress headhunting."

[2] See pages 1-4 of the correspondence between Harry S. Parker and Pacific American Corp. dated October 5, 1983, in the Collections Records file labeled Steven G. Alpert—Indonesian Textiles.

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1983.134
tags
#draft
#completed
%Archived
deities: AAT: 300343850
heads (representations): AAT: 300262520
geometric patterns: AAT: 300165213
@Bilal-Gore
stripes: AAT: 300010230
white (color): AAT: 300129784
goddess: AAT: 300343852
crosses (motifs): AAT: 300010044
red (color): AAT: 300126225
patterns (design elements): AAT: 300010108
textiles (visual works): AAT: 300014063
supernatural (concepts): AAT: 300055947
*Arts of the Pacific Islands
wars: AAT: 300055314
battles: AAT: 300185692
warriors: AAT: 300261945
weaving: AAT: 300053642
ikat: AAT: 300249861
embroidering: AAT: 300053653
warp: AAT: 300227930
weft: AAT: 300227934
cotton (fiber): AAT: 300183670
jackets (garments / saco / chaqueta): AAT: 300046167
dyeing: AAT: 300053049
dye (colorant): AAT: 300013029
supplementary-weft (textile components/textile weaving techniques by patterning): DMA
weft patterning (supplementary weft/textile weaving techniques by patterning): AAT: 300228486
%exhibitions pending
vest (garment): AAT: 300209904
pattern weft (supplementary weft/textile components): AAT: 300227866
Sarawak (state/Maylasia): TGN: 1001952
Iban: AAT: 300387545
combat: AAT: 300379752
backs (object portions): AAT: 300190692
source file
object_notes_2_d-0031.xml.nores