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#1 |
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There are many Dayak tribes in Borneo (Kayan, Keniah, Iban, Bahau, Modang......) Sometimes also local (or made by Kalimantan carvers) keris handles are influenced by these tribe patterns.
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#2 | |
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#3 |
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This ancestor Aso motif can be seen in a lot of book about Borneo tribes art .. all written in english language with many pics and also accurate description about meaning and symbolism (for example: hornbill and dragon, borneo and beyond, the eloquent dead,.... ).
IMO to put a keris on this kind of board is the same to put a little ET in crib...but of course is only my personal taste ...Here some keris hits with (i suppose) borneo patterns |
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#4 | |
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![]() ![]() Still i am hoping that we might be able to identify the actual tribe this came from through the particular style of this carving. Maybe i should move this over to the main forum since some of our Dayak experts might not have seen this over here on the keris forum. |
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#5 |
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How about this "Rangda", ratu leak of Balinese magic world? (A picture from somewhere...)
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#6 |
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Ganja, i am not sure what, if any, relationship exists between Rangda and this image, but the similarities with it's out-stretched tongue did not get past me.
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#7 |
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No comment.
EDIT:- Sorry, I thought it was obvious:- Maori haka Last edited by A. G. Maisey; 12th April 2010 at 11:40 PM. |
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#8 | |
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I think the 1st 2 pics are of a Tajong-like hilt produced by non-native carvers. So the motif cannot be considered accurate for Tajongs. ![]() |
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#9 |
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Okay, just going to reel this in a bit and focus.
![]() I could be wrong, but i don't think that this is an American board depicting the great god the atom Enstein, nor is it from a Malay tajong design or the Maori of New Zealand. ![]() I am fairly sure it is indeed Dayak. I am also fairly sure that it should, to some extent at least, be possible to determine what tribe it is based on the actual design of the carving. I have seen some of our Dayak collectors tell tribal origin of mandaus based on the carving of the hilts so it seems to follow that design styles are specific to certain groups. I would also be very interested in understanding what the purpose of the basket this was attached to might have been. The one Gustav shows might provide some clues to this as it seems to be in a museum. Was there any descriptive labeling? |
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#10 |
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No David, there wasn't. It is from de Young museum in San Francisco.
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#11 |
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David, this subject of Dyak tribe ID of ethnographic objects based upon carving style is something I know diddley squat about.
No way I could even attempt it. However, give me half a dozen or so mandaus and I will probably be able to ID tribe of origin. Why? Because Hornbill & Dragon and some other minor books I have, between them, give pretty comprehensive coverage of mandau and other weapon styles that are associated with the various tribes. To jump from that sort of ID to an ID based on stylistic variation might be asking just a wee bit too much. |
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