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#1 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 7,029
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David, I would need to look at method of construction of the pendok before I could give a definite opinion on where it was made, but now you have drawn my attention to the pendok motif, that I did no more than glance at yesterday, I can say that this motif contains a lot of Jogja sub-motifs.Additionally, as you have pointed out, the overall profile of the scabbard just doesn't look like Bali --- but it could get by as Lombok.
From what I can see, I think the atasan of the wrongko is genuine Bali or Lombok. I very probably knew the man who produced the hilt, he might also have had a part in the pendok production. I would not take a stance against production of the entire thing in Jogja, beginning with a nice ivory atasan. |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: What is still UK
Posts: 5,866
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I should have added this pic. So it is not antique ? Age guess? I do not think that really matters although we all really want to see old one examples as collectors, but for a museum which is about culture as much as preserving the past it does not really matter. Do you think the shiny is gold?
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#3 | |
Keris forum moderator
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Nova Scotia
Posts: 7,220
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The photo you added is a little helpful, but for me not that much. Others might be able to glean more from it. The Singo seems a bit odd to me, but this doesn't look like a Lombok blade (it certainly isn't Balinese) and so from what i can see i would still place it in Jawa . I cannot tell from the image if the kinatah (the shiny) is real gold or not. It appears to be a blade that has some age at least. But the hilt is certainly contemporary and as Alan has pointed out, a Bali style that was probably made in Jawa. Alan would know more about what market such hilts were specifically made for, but many collectors tend to look at this particular type of hilt as not being all that serious of an effort. They often show up on more touristy ensembles. And the pendok is using Jogya motifs that would seem out of place for a keris meant for Bali. It's not so surprising to find a Javanese blade dressed for another keris culture, but it does seem odd that it would then use Javanese motifs visible to the public as well as this type of hilt. ![]() Last edited by David; 10th April 2018 at 08:36 PM. |
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