Tubular Kirt (Sarong)

Description

Batiks were sometimes produced to commenmorate special events. One popular subject within the Indo-European community was the introduction of new means of transportation. The front or head of this skirt contains a large floral arrangement on a dark red ground. The body shows four views of a European steamship bearing the words "Krakatau Amsterdam" on the side. A 1930 photograph of the Dutch freighter Krakatau, named for the massive volcano that erupted in 1883, confirms it as the likely subject.

This is the only batik in the Art Institute of Chicago's 2017 exhibition Batik Textiles of Java whose pattern was not hand drawn but applied with copper stamps (caps), a process that reduced production time but also the quality of workmanship.

Provenance

E.M. (Pete) Bakwin, Chicago, by Dec. 14, 2005 [E.M. Bakwin Collection of Indonesian Textiles; incoming receipt RX24972, Dec. 14, 2005; copy in curatorial object file]; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2005.

Tubular Kirt (Sarong)

c. 1930

Accession Number

185340

Medium

Cotton, plain weave; stamp-applied wax resist dyed (batik cap)

Dimensions

189.3 × 180 cm (74 1/2 × 42 1/2 in.)

Classification

costume

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of E. M. Bakwin Indonesian Textile Collection