Logo Pusaka Collection
spacer ONLINE MUSEUM OF INDONESIAN IKAT TEXTILES   CURATOR: Dr PETER TEN HOOPEN  BROWSE FROM:  [RANDOM] [001] [050] [100] [150] [200] [250] [300] [350] [375]



spacer spacer



IKAT FROM ADONARA, INDONESIA


GALLERY  icon

literature

  • 130 ADONARA
    Kewatek (sarong). Warp ikat. Late 19th to early 20th C. Village unknown. Lamaholot people.
  • 284 ADONARA
    Kewatek (sarong). Warp ikat. 19th c. to very early 20th. Village unknown, Lamaholot people.


Under-researched, ill-reputed Adonara


Adonara lies in the most western part of the Solor Archipelago just off the eastern tip of Flores, close to Larantuka. The landscape is dominated by the volcano Ili Boleng in the east of the island, which rises to 1650m.
     Not much is known about Adonara and its indigenous culture, or what remains of it after the onslaught of christianisation and islamisation. The one thing that appears certain is that its people, divided into half a dozen tribes that speak as many languages, most of them mutually unintelligible, are highly bellicose by nature. Inter-village warfare was very common in previous centuries, and occurred as late as the second half of the 20th C.
     As Ernst Vatter wrote in his 1932, Ata Kiwan, based on extensive travel in the region, "There is no other area in the eastern Dutch Indies in which so many murders take place as on Adonara, [..] no other island has such a bad reputation, both among the Europeans and the natives of neighboring areas." Vatter attributed this to the islanders "vanity bordering on the grotesque" coupled with "marked feelings of inferiority vis-à-vis their own race and culture, love of war and bloodthirst paired with mistrust and fear, and, finally, an unmistakable yearning for crude and horrible deeds..." Et cetera, one gets the drift.
     An important cultural distinction with the other parts of the Lamaholot regions, is that patola here are not common property of a clan, but privately owned by the rulers, which has allowed us to buy the magnificent elephant patolu from the Raja of Tarong.

Homemade or imported, that is the question

 
Women on Adonara wearing ikat sarongs

 
Women on Adonara wearing ikat sarongs. Photo Ernst or Hannah Vatter, from Ata Kiwan.
How much of a place Adonara deserves in an overview of ikat textiles in the Indonesian archipelago is debatable. Vatter's book has some photographs of women in sarongs with stripes, some of which appear to be ikated. When we spent a week on the island in the early 1980s, we did see a few older women (including our landlady) wearing similar sarongs with some decoration in ikat. These typically had numerous horizontal stripes in a variety of colours, some of which appeared to have been achieved with natural, but most with chemical dyes, including striking yellow and deep purple. A few stripes, usually not exceeding an inch in width, had some ikat work, mainly simple dots and squiggles in white on indigo or morinda.
     It never occurred to us to try to buy any of these sarongs because they were so plain and unappealing - or, in the case of a few that seemed to have been made with vegetable dyes only, so worn and faded that we felt it not worth taking them. Unfortunately this is not the only mistake we made while travelling in the area. Older ikat cloths with certain Adonara provenance are very rare, in whatever condition.
     The question remains if the ikat work on these sarongs was actually done on Adonara. Some sources maintain that while weaving is practiced on Adonara, ikating is not. Vatter already spoke of bundles of yarn ready to weave being imported: "The women still spin and weave nearly exclusively for their own use [which in fact is the rule in much of the region, tH], and their products are not very attractive, as the homespun yarn, dyed red or blue, is never used by itself, but always interwoven with some bundles of shrill coloured import yarn from the Chinese toko. Ikating appears to be completely unknown. We did actually see some old sarongs with ikated bands, but, as we could ascertain, these had not been tied and dyed in the village itself, but bought as ready to use thread in East Flores or on Lomblem [Lembata], especially in the Gunung Api [Ili Api] region."
     Ruth Barnes, in her Ostindonesien im 20. Jahrhundert, contests Vatter's views and explains that ikat work is indeed done on the island, to wit in the Muslim community of Tanah Boleng, which also exports skeins with ikat to other parts of the island. This is about as much as is known about ikat on Adonara today. Few collectors of ethnographic material travel to mission-ravaged Adonara, and no researcher that we are aware of has embraced the island, perhaps as a result of its repute, so the dearth of information is likely to persist.

A serious dearth of knowledge

The lack of knowledge shows up even where we would not expect it. A few museums and dealers show ikat sarongs that are attributed to Adonara. In several cases those attributions are incorrect or questionable. Object 2002.1001 in the Art Institute of Chicago, for instance, is labeled 'Indonesia, Flores, possibly Adonara', while it is certainly not from Flores, possibly indeed from Adonara, but much more likely from Alor. This is not mentioned to censure the curator of the AIC (who actually added the note 'Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change'), just to show how limited our collective knowledge of these cloths still is. In fact most of what we know of Adonara today we still owe to Ernst Vatter.


 

Literature

There is no literature specifically focusing on Adonara. Most titles dealing with Indonesian textiles in general either devote a few sentences to Adonara or ignore the island altogether. The best source about the island and its culture still remains Ernst Vatter's 1932 Ata Kiwan.


Map of Adonara


map Adonar Rouffaer
Map of Adonara, amazingly accurate, sketched by G.P. Rouffaer in 1910. Rijksuniversiteit Leiden. Click on map to load high resolution version in seperate window.



©Peter ten Hoopen, 2024. The contents of this website are provided for personal, educational, non-commercial use only.
No part of this website may be reproduced in any form without explicit permission of the copyright holder.


spacer