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Old 27th December 2012, 10:08 PM   #1
Rick
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Cool Oddity

Sometimes I like a keris that is a little 'different' .
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Old 27th December 2012, 10:26 PM   #2
David
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Nice. I have seen this dress form before. Can you tell us what you know about it...
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Old 27th December 2012, 10:47 PM   #3
Rick
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Well, I can't tell you much, David .

It is jumbo sized and appears to be N. Coast, Cirebon; the handle appears to be a Ganesha form .

Its purpose ?

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Old 27th December 2012, 11:19 PM   #4
Sajen
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Hello David,

congrats, I am green with envy!

A very similar keris is pictured in "The Kris, Mystic Weapon of the Malay World" from Edward Frey on page 57, picture i. This keris has as well an Cirebon ganesha handle, the gandar has nearly the same carving as well the wrangka while the form is different, like turned around by 180 degree.
Just have taken a picture, not very good but shows it better as just a description.
Question will be, was this a "common" style by Cirebon keris or have someone copied the in the book shown keris with own fantasy?
Can you see patinanation at the wooden parts?

Regards,

Detlef
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Old 28th December 2012, 12:54 AM   #5
Naga Sasra
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I have also seen this piece before, and believe it came out of a large quality collection in Florida. I have had the opportunity to handle it in person and can add a little to the history.
From what I know this piece has been in the above mentioned collection since 1981 and as such not a copy of the one shown in Frey's book. His book was first published in 1986 with the simular type carving not included in the book until a much later edition.
As for the wrangka being 180 degrees apart, I offer no sensable explanation, perhaps someone else can enlighten us as to the significance of the wrangka being either up or down.
Looking at the photo from the book and the one Rick posted, it looks as it could have been carved by the same carver. It would be interesting if someone could shed a little more light on this "Oddity" as it is rather uncommon and could have been carved in Cirebon on the N. Coast of Jawa or perhaps even in Madura.
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Old 28th December 2012, 01:17 AM   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Naga Sasra
From what I know this piece has been in the above mentioned collection since 1981 and as such not a copy of the one shown in Frey's book. His book was first published in 1986 with the simular type carving not included in the book until a much later edition.
My edition is the third one from 2003.
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