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#1 |
(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: OKLAHOMA, USA
Posts: 3,138
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MY STYLE OF COLLECTING SEEMS TO BE MORE LIKE THE FREE CLIMBER WHO SEES A COOL LOOKING ROCK FACE AND LOOKS IT OVER AND PLANS A START AND A ROUTE AND THEN GOES AFTER IT. WHICH IS TO SAY I BUY A KERIS IF I LIKE ITS LOOKS AND FEEL AND CAN AFFORD IT.
LIKE THE FREE CLIMBER I MAY FALL BUT UNLIKE HIM I DONT DIE BUT CONTINUE TO LIVE AND LEARN. ![]() I WOULD RECOMEND THE MORE PLANNED AND LOGICAL METHOD TO COLLECTING KERIS ESPECIALLY IF INVESTMENT IS THE GOAL. MY STYLE IS A BIT SCATTER BRAINED AND SURELY NOT WELL RESEARCHED AND PLANNED TO PROCEED IN A STRUCTURED WAY BUT ITS FUN. ![]() |
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#2 | |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 235
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#3 | |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Singapore
Posts: 54
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#4 |
Keris forum moderator
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Nova Scotia
Posts: 7,211
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Sorry, i guess i just don't jive with the mountain climbing analogy. It's a bit too competitive and conquering for my take on keris collection.
That said i do believe i do have some vague goals. For instance there are certain types of keris i would most definitely like to see make their way into my collection eventually. I would like a good tajong example one day and a nice keris panjang. There are a few other special dhapurs and pamors that interest me that i would like to obtain. While i would like to have a well rounded collection, i am neither rushing nor pushing for it. A keris either calls to me or it doesn't, and sometimes the ones that call are quite unexpected. ![]() My biggest goal however is to hopefully come to a greater understanding of the cultural and spiritual connection of the keris to time (era), place (both seen and unseen) and the individual and societial mind. Hands on examples seem to help this study. ![]() |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 6,991
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This is a good point for discussion, Jussi.
When I was very, very much younger than I am now, I had a very sharply defined strategy. I didn't think it involved wanting much. Only every keris that was ever made. At the time I did not understand what my strategy involved. I never realized the objective of my strategy, but up until about age 30 I did buy every keris I encountered, and that I could afford. That resulted in a massive accumulation of keris, which I began to get rid of sometime in my thirties, and by the time I was in my early 40's that accumulation had shrunk into double figures. Then I began to really learn about keris. From age 14 through to about age 42 I was really only in kindergarten, learning my ABC --- yeah, OK, I'm a slow learner. As I learnt more , I got rid of even more keris, while at the same time I bought more keris. I'd well and truly dropped my original strategy by then, and my strategy at that time was to buy every good quality piece I could afford. Trouble was I couldn't stick with this strategy, because I'd be tempted by minor unusual pieces that often totally lacked quality. After this phase I started to specialize. I had realized that I simply could not afford to buy the very best of what I came across, so the chase for improvement in quality was shelved, and I began concentrating on archaic pieces. Because good archaic pieces are so very, very scarce, this meant that I could go maybe 4 or 5 years without buying a single good archaic piece --- and I still got sidetracked by those minor unusual pieces. As things stand at the present time I do not have any strategy at all for collecting, because I no longer consider myself a collector. For a little while now I have been in the process of reducing my collection to a manageable level. I will still buy the occasional piece if it grabs me in some way, but there is no longer any sort of defined plan, its a matter of if I see something I really like for some reason or another, and I can afford it, I'll buy it. But purchases are very few and far between. My primary goal for some time has been the collection of understanding and knowledge, rather than the collection of actual keris. Some years ago I knew a fellow who was one of the world's great authorities on Japanese swords. When I met him he had a very large collection of swords, which he relentlessly reduced in number during the time I knew him. As he reduced his collection, he would very occasionally buy an additional sword, which could easily be sold a few months later. His stated aim was to have a "collection of one sword, and that sword will be perfect". I'm not quite as radical as this, but my thoughts do tend in that general direction. |
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#6 | |
Keris forum moderator
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Nova Scotia
Posts: 7,211
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 6,991
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Maybe it depends upon what one wants.
The fellow I am talking about really did not need to see Japanese swords to have a reference, everything was already in his head. I'm talking about somebody who had won signature reading competitions against Japanese. What he wanted was just one perfect sword, not a library full of reference swords. He no longer needed them. |
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