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23rd March 2024, 08:21 PM | #1 |
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Bali Keris Info & Advice Requested
Hi All,
This keris has what looks to me to be a rather straight forward, good quality, Balinese blade with good age. I count 15 luk and the blade is about 17.75” (45.085cm) long with a kelap lintah ganja. The only odd thing is the orange and black pigments in the fullers. The black pigment is barely visible and is in the fuller that terminates with the pecitan. Do the pigments have a culturally symbolic significance? The hilt and sheath (especially the hilt) are really strange. The hilt (which appears to be on backwards) is so odd that at first I dismissed it as just something somebody stuck on the blade so they could sell it but the brass (or bronze) selut seems to be designed for a keris tang and it fits the hilt. For all its strangeness, the hilt appears to have been made with care. The brass pommel has been affixed with two screws that have been filed down so that the screw slots are mostly missing. There is a 1/8” diameter hole through the pommel that doesn’t extend into the wood. The hilt is very firmly attached. Normally, I would just use a heat gun to heat the blade by the tang to loosen the hilt so I could turn it around but, in this case I’m afraid to damage the paint on the blade. I was thinking of wrapping the blade in wet cloth and using an attachment on my heat gun to restrict the heat to the tang/selut area. What does everybody think about that? Unless the wranka is made with an extension (like some Sumatran sheaths) that is covered by the hilt wrap, the sheath appears to be sarong iras. The front of the wranka shows kadjo pelet coloration and the back has a black pigmented inline border. The blade fits reasonably well in the wranka. The hilt wrap appears to be some sort of fabric (maybe even friction tape) that has been very neatly spiral wrapped around the gandar. There is some black pigment showing above the wrap on the back of the gandar. Something may have been attached to the bottom of the gandar (see blurry photo attached) but I have no idea what it could have been. Sincerely, RobT Last edited by RobT; 23rd March 2024 at 08:25 PM. Reason: grammar & add'l info |
23rd March 2024, 09:43 PM | #2 |
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I feel that I am looking at an out-of-society reconstruction here.
The blade does appear to be Bali, the visible part of the wrongko could possibly have been produced by reshaping a damaged original. The craftsmanship of the hilt is not Balinese, Javanese, nor of any other SE Asian society that I can readily identify. The orange in the sogokan I feel was probably originally red, so with red + black + the symbolism of Siwa carried by the sogokan, we have the trimurti:- Siwa-Brahma-Wisnu. This would be a part of the out-of-culture work, it would not have been done in Bali, but could have been added by a person with some understanding of socio-religious mores in Bali. Opinion only, I have never seen anything like this previously. |
24th March 2024, 11:08 AM | #3 |
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incredibly strange , although I cannot claim any in depth knowledge , my gut feeling is that this is a kris which was , as A.G. Maisey writes, a heavily modified kris, by someone outside the Indonesian culture (and not only the Balinese).
The setting of the hilt with screws is absolutely incredible and the warangka was certainly reshaped after some major damage. So all an all, a conversation piece. Heat gun may free the hilt but then, what are you going to do? Are you going to change all the parts of this kris that are incongruous? If you are not , then you may as well leave it as it is, and if you are going to replace the hilt, the gandar en warangka, the paint of the sogokan would be the last of your concerns (let alone the fact hat if the blade would be stained they would probably disappear in the process unless you use the brushing and tapping technique. In my opinion you may leave it as it is af a Xenomorph ( just made this word up, as foreign form to the original culture) kris . Enjoy it for what it is Having taken a look to your previous posts I couldn't help to notice you apparent preference for things that are best defined as oddballs , which is a criterium for collecting in its own right. |
24th March 2024, 06:38 PM | #4 |
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Hello Rob,
Like the others I've never seen something similar. The "wrongko" is reshaped in my opinion, can you show pics from that area? But it seems that this was done very long ago. The handle is unusual too and the orange paint in the sogokan is unusual indeed. I personally wouldn't change anything by this keris and would keep it like this as a curiosity. Regards, Detlef |
24th March 2024, 06:47 PM | #5 |
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I don't really have much to add here and i am basically in agreement with Alan Milandro and Detlef.
The hilt is indeed out-of-culture, but i'm not sure it is a Western design. Something about it (perhaps that mother of pearl inlays) leads me to think of the Philippines as a a possible origin. I can't place the blade, but agree that it probably Balinese. I would leave this odd ensemble as is also. Last edited by David; 24th March 2024 at 08:22 PM. Reason: typing error |
24th March 2024, 06:52 PM | #6 |
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24th March 2024, 08:21 PM | #7 | |
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Quote:
I will adjust my post. Thanks for pointing out may error. |
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24th March 2024, 10:18 PM | #8 | |
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Quote:
Why should someone with a deep knowledge in Balinese Hinduism come to the idea to paint the sogokan red? I've read, that's your opinion only! The scabbard is reshaped when I am not wrong but it looks to my eyes very well patinated so I guess it was done in the culture. In my opinion there is a good possibility that all modifications could originate in Bali or Lombok. Also opinion only! Regards, Detlef |
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24th March 2024, 11:07 PM | #9 |
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I don't know about the hilt. I really can't see anything Balinese in that. It seems very well made though. But i have never seen mother of pearl and nail decorations like that on Balinese or Lombok hilts. It puts me a little in mind of this type of decorations from recent Luzon knives, though perhaps a bit classier.
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25th March 2024, 01:38 AM | #10 |
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Detlef, my phrasing was:-
"--- some understanding of socio-religious mores in Bali. ---" I did not say, nor think, that the person who applied the red paint might have had a deep knowledge of Bali-Hindu religion. However, if we look at the possible intended symbolism that could be attached to the paint job & its placement, what we have is this:- sogokan> lingga> Siwa red> Brahma black> Wisnu and there we have the Trimurti. Whoever wielded the paint brush could very probably have had sufficient understanding to think that he was doing something in tune with Balinese mores. In respect of these modifications being carried out in either Bali or in Lombok, in my opinion that is a total impossibility. In Bali & Lombok the keris is a clearly defined item of dress, it MUST comply with certain specific standards, this keris under discussion is totally outside of the required parameters, not only that, but the hilt in particular is quite ludicrous in an indigenous context. As others commented, for a collector outside of the relevant societies, this keris as presented is quite collectable, but for wear in Bali or Lombok? I rather think not. |
27th March 2024, 09:21 AM | #11 |
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Hello Alan,
I just was going with the well patinated reshaped scabbard. Such a patination doesn't happen in a short time. Regards, Detlef |
31st March 2024, 05:24 PM | #12 |
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Add'l Photo
A. G. Maisey,
I understand your concern about the heat gun but, after having dismantled and stripped all the woodwork in our Victorian house (including the stairway), I can say without boasting, that I am rather expert in the use of a heat gun. There are attachments for my gun that can concentrate the heat on a very small area. Setting the gun on low heat and directing that heat onto the selut/tang/ganja area will loosen any native cutler’s resin. I know that I can do this without damaging the blade or hilt. My main concern is with the paint. It doesn’t take much heat to pop paint off of a substrate. If more than a minimal amount of heat travels from the ganja to the blade proper, the paint could be compromised (either discolored or loosened from the metal). The strategy of wrapping the blade with a wet towel is (hopefully) my take on the Japanese method for differentially heat treating a blade edge. I would use wet clay but I don’t have any. My other fear is that someone used a modern glue or (worse yet) epoxy to secure the hilt. In that case, the amount of heat I will be using will likely be insufficient to loosen the hilt. David, In my initial post I had mentioned the possibility of the wranka having a stem on the bottom that would attach to the gandar (like some Bugis sheaths). I have never seen this feature on a Bali sheath but I’m no keris expert. My problem with the wranka is that it is far deeper than on any Bali sheath I have ever seen. The deep warnka is needed because, if it were not so deep, the gandar would have to be much longer than it is now. I have taken a new picture that shows this. I also mentioned in my first post that the fabric hilt wrap may be friction tape. This is something I have seen on a number of Philippine sheaths. In my second post, I mentioned that I thought it unlikely that, if the piece had wound up in the Philippines, the paint was added there unless it had some non-Hindu meaning. Sincerely, RobT |
31st March 2024, 10:53 PM | #13 |
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Rob, my concern with a heat gun is mostly because of the possibility of damage to a hilt or uwer, this keris does not have a hilt that needs to be preserved if it is removed. There is no possibility of affecting any heat treatment that the blade may have been subjected to, because the lower part of the blade will not have been hardened.
Removal of the hilt would only be necessary if the blade was to be stained, staining of the blade would only be necessary if the keris were to be redressed in Balinese dress. If I use a two part epoxy adhesive I use Araldite, usually 5 minute, this has a service temperature to 100C, it will lose adhesion at 100C, there is a high temperature type that has service temp. to 400C, I believe it would be unusual to encounter this, but even so, 400C would still be OK to release with heat. Equally, the paint has no place at all on the blade, sure, in can be hypothesized that a previous owner thought he was doing something in tune with Balinese mores, but he was wrong. If the decision is to restore, the paint must go. If you're comfortable in using a heat gun, then use it. I have demounted more hilts than I can remember, certainly well into the hundreds, maybe more, keris & other blades. I've used candles, kerosene lamps, propane torches, & yes, heat guns, but it all comes down to one thing:- get heat up into the tang so that the adhesive lets go, there no great degree of skill required, but a strong wrist & a bench vice can help. I see the whole matter very simply, as in an earlier post:- If a curio collector, then leave as is, if a keris collector, redress as Bali. |
2nd April 2024, 12:38 AM | #14 | |
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Quote:
Finding a suitable hilt and uwer for the blade is, of course, a much easier proposition. I currently have two unsheathed Bali keris that i would love to fully dress one day. It is not an easy task outside of the culture. |
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2nd April 2024, 01:03 AM | #15 |
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I agree David.
But really, it is perspective:- if you cannot get the blade dressed easily, it is a simple decision to let it stay as is. |
2nd April 2024, 08:59 AM | #16 |
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I have had one bad experience sending through a friend 2 blades to an address in Bali the blades got lost, but actually it was largely my friend's fault.
On the contrary I have had several successes in sending the measures (it is not easy but can be done) of the blade to a carver in Bali and they have made the dress for me , it needed minor alteration to fit and I am very happy with it. It surely can be done , but one has to want to do it. |
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