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Ikat from West Timor, Timor, Indonesia
 

004 Timor, West Timor


Turban cloth



Locale: Probably made by Atoni people (Atoin meto).
Period: 1940-60
Panels: 1
Design: Netting-like pattern of interlocking double-pointed diamonds with wing-like motifs. Pattern of unknown significance, most likely stylised crocodiles or lizards.
Size: 51 x 213 cm (20 x 83.8 in)
Weight: 295 g (272 g/m2)
Yarn: Cotton, commercial, fine, quad-ply
Comment: Rare motif, finely woven. Material is pleasantly soft, probably due to being well worn. Provenance as yet undetermined, but Sumbanese seller thought it was from Soe, in central West Timor. Probably a turban cloth. According to Timor expert Julie Emery, it may be a creation by Timorese master weaver Sebastian Uskuno from Unab. Pattern is similar to that found on some Semau (off-Timor) ikats, but these are always morinda red. The tiny tumpal (triangle) endings are often seen on Timor cloths. Twisted fringes. If you can help with definitive identification please inform us.
Background: Additional information in chapters on Timor and West Timor.
Published: Woven Languages, 2014.
Ikat Textiles of the Indonesian Archipelago, 2018.
Sources: Similar to turban cloth of roughly equal size identified as Atoni from Insana in Khan-Majlis, Woven Messages, Fig. 256, with stylised crocodiles in white on dark blue, also covering entire cloth. Also similar to first half 20th C. cloth from East Timor (no further indication of provenance given) of equal proportions, but a little shorter and narrower, in Fig. 303. The treatment of the central band separating the two sections is nearly identical. Not identical but similar is the overall build-up of the pattern of diamond-like shapes.
  
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