1983.69 Woman's ceremonial skirt (tapis)


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Graceful ancestral boats with curving bows and sterns are embroidered with silk threads on two bands of this tapis. Each vessel carries five frontal figures. The central figure on the right boat—with a mica disk for a head—sits beneath a decorated arch and is flanked by others wearing feathered headdresses. Garlanded poles topped with mica disks separate them. The embroidered panels are displayed on richly dyed tricolored ikat panels inspired by imported Indian textiles. The addition of costly silk threads, mirrors, and gold foil gives this skirt a shimmering radiance.

Boats are a ubiquitous and seminal symbol in the textile arts of Indonesia, the world's largest island nation. They may simultaneously refer to the Dong Son era vessels (3rd-2nd century BCE) found on bronze ceremonial objects and large kettle drums, ancestral ships of the dead, and the role of women as "vessels" in perpetuating the survival of a clan. 

Excerpt from
Roslyn Walker, Label text, 2016.

NOTES
1984: Selection from the SG Alpert Collection

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

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PROVENANCE
1970s - 1983: Steven G. Alpert, Dallas, Texas, purchased from Ansarunddin, Jakarta, Indonesia

1983: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from above [1]

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] 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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General Description
 
Graceful ancestral boats with curving bows and sterns are embroidered with silk threads on two bands of this tapis. Each vessel carries five frontal figures. The central figure on the right boat—with a mica disk for a head—sits beneath a decorated arch and is flanked by others wearing feathered headdresses. Garlanded poles topped with mica disks separate them. The embroidered panels are displayed on richly dyed tricolored ikat panels inspired by imported Indian textiles. The addition of costly silk threads, mirrors, and gold foil gives this skirt a shimmering radiance.

Boats are a ubiquitous and seminal symbol in the textile arts of Indonesia, the world's largest island nation. They may simultaneously refer to the Dong Son era vessels (3rd-2nd century BCE) found on bronze ceremonial objects and large kettle drums, ancestral ships of the dead, and the role of women as "vessels" in perpetuating the survival of a clan. 

Excerpt from
Roslyn Walker, Label text, 2016.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
1984: Selection from the SG Alpert Collection

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE
1970s - 1983: Steven G. Alpert, Dallas, Texas, purchased from Ansarunddin, Jakarta, Indonesia

1983: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from above [1]

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] 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. 

AUDIO ASSETS 

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Objects
number
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1983.69
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
figures (representations): AAT: 300189808
%Archived
@Bilal-Gore
red (color): AAT: 300126225
patterns (design elements): AAT: 300010108
textiles (visual works): AAT: 300014063
mirrors: AAT: 300037682
*Arts of the Pacific Islands
panels (surface components): AAT: 300069079
skirts (garments / refrajo / corte): AAT: 300209932
weaving: AAT: 300053642
silk (textile): AAT: 300243428
ikat: AAT: 300249861
embroidering: AAT: 300053653
warp: AAT: 300227930
weft: AAT: 300227934
cotton (fiber): AAT: 300183670
dyeing: AAT: 300053049
dye (colorant): AAT: 300013029
%exhibitions pending
Lampung (province/Indonesia): TGN: 1001382
brownish black: AAT: 300127573
source file
object_notes_2_d-0069.xml.nores