Upozornenie: Prezeranie týchto stránok je určené len pre návštevníkov nad 18 rokov!
Zásady ochrany osobných údajov.
Používaním tohto webu súhlasíte s uchovávaním cookies, ktoré slúžia na poskytovanie služieb, nastavenie reklám a analýzu návštevnosti. OK, súhlasím









A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9

Batik
 

Batik
Batik from Surakarta in Central Java province in Indonesia; before 1997
TypeArt fabric
MaterialCambrics, silk, cotton
Place of originIndonesia[1][2][3]
Indonesian Batik
Batik craftswomen in Java drawing intricate patterns using canting and wax that are kept hot and liquid in a small heated pan,
on 27 July 2011
CountryIndonesia
DomainsTraditional craftsmanship, oral traditions and expressions, social practices, rituals and festive events
Reference00170
RegionAsia and the Pacific
Inscription history
Inscription2009 (4th session)
ListRepresentative
Written batik (batik tulis) and stamped batik (batik cap)
Education and training in Indonesian Batik[a]
Museum Batik Pekalongan, Central Java
CountryIndonesia
DomainsTraditional craftsmanship, oral traditions and expressions, social practices, rituals and festive events
Reference00318
RegionAsia and the Pacific
Inscription history
Inscription2009 (4th session)
ListGood Safeguarding Practices

Batik[b] is an Indonesian technique of wax-resist dyeing applied to the whole cloth.[1][4][2][5][6] This technique originated from the island of Java, Indonesia.[3] Batik is made either by drawing dots and lines of wax with a spouted tool called a canting,[c] or by printing the wax with a copper stamp called a cap.[d][7] The applied wax resists dyes and therefore allows the artisan to colour selectively by soaking the cloth in one colour, removing the wax with boiling water, and repeating if multiple colours are desired.[3]

Indonesian coastal batik (batik pesisir) made in the island of Java has a history of acculturation, a mixture of native and foreign cultures.[8] It is a newer model compared to inland batik, and it uses more colors, though the patterns are less intricate. This is because inland batik used to be made by select experts living in palace areas, while coastal batik can be made by anyone.[citation needed]

Batik is very important to Indonesians and many people wear it to formal or casual events. Batik is commonly used by Indonesians in various rituals, ceremonies, traditions, celebrations, and even in daily uses.[9]

On October 2, 2009, UNESCO officially recognized the batik—written batik (batik tulis) and stamped batik (batik cap)—as a Masterpiece of Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity from Indonesia, and encouraged the Indonesian people and the Indonesian government to safeguard, transmit, promote, and develop the craftsmanship of batik.[1] Since then, Indonesia celebrates "the National Batik Day" (Indonesian: Hari Batik Nasional) annually on October 2. Nowadays, Indonesians wear batik in honor of this ancient tradition.[9]

In the same year, UNESCO also recognized "Education and training in Indonesian Batik intangible cultural heritage for elementary, junior, senior, vocational school and polytechnic students, in collaboration with the Batik Museum in Pekalongan" as a Masterpiece of Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity in the Register of Good Safeguarding Practices List.[10]

Etymology

The word batik is Javanese in origin. The word bathikan also means "drawing" or "writing" in Javanese.[11] When the word is absorbed to Indonesian, the "th-" sound is reduced to a "t-" sound more pronounceable to non-Javanese speakers.

The word batik is first recorded in English in the Encyclopædia Britannica of 1880, in which it is spelled as battik. It is attested in the Indonesian Archipelago during the Dutch colonial period in various forms such as mbatik, mbatek, batik and batek.[12][13][14] Batik known as euyeuk in Sundanese, cloth can be processed into a form of batik by a pangeyeuk (batik maker).[15]

History

Jlamprang or ceplok batik motif of clothes of 13th-century East Javanese Prajnaparamita statue resembles batik, National Museum of Indonesia, Jakarta

Batik is an ancient fabric wax-resist dyeing tradition of Java, Indonesia.[16] The art of batik is most highly developed and some of the best batiks in the world still made there. In Java, all the materials for the process are readily available—cotton and beeswax and plants from which different vegetable dyes are made.[17] Indonesian batik predates written records: G. P. Rouffaer argues that the technique might have been introduced during the 6th or 7th century from India or Sri Lanka.[18] On the other hand, the Dutch archaeologist J.L.A. Brandes and the Indonesian archaeologist F.A. Sutjipto believe Indonesian batik is a native tradition, since several regions in Indonesia such as Toraja, Flores, and Halmahera which were not directly influenced by Hinduism, have attested batik making tradition as well.[19]

The existence of the oldest Batik activities came from Ponorogo which was still called Wengker before the 7th century, the Kingdom in Central Java learned batik from Ponorogo. Because of this, Ponorogo batik is somewhat similar to batik circulating in Central Java, except that the batik produced by Ponorogo is generally dark black or commonly called batik irengan because it is close to magical elements so that it was developed by the kingdoms in Central Java and Yogyakarta.[20]

Pre-1867 Javanese batik probably from the Semarang workshop owned by Carolina Josephina von Franquemont (1817–1867). This sarong was purchased by the King of Siam during a state visit, most likely c. 1871. There are few surviving pieces of 19th-century commercial batik wearing-apparel.

Based on the contents of the Sundanese Manuscript, Sundanese people have known about Batik since the 12th century. Based on ancient Sundanese manuscript Sanghyang Siksa Kandang Karesian written 1518 AD, it is recorded that Sundanese having batik which is identical and representative of Sundanese culture in general. Several motif are even noted in the text, based on those data sources the process of Batik Sundanese creation begins step by step.[21]

Rouffaer reported that the gringsing pattern was already known by the 12th century in Kediri, East Java. He concluded that this delicate pattern could be created only by using the canting, an etching tool that holds a small reservoir of hot wax invented in Java around that time.[19] The carving details of clothes worn by East Javanese Prajnaparamita statues from around the 13th century show intricate floral patterns within rounded margins, similar to today's traditional Javanese jlamprang or ceplok batik motif.[22][better source needed] The motif is thought to represent the lotus, a sacred flower in Hindu-Buddhist beliefs. This evidence suggests that intricate batik fabric patterns applied with the canting existed in 13th-century Java or even earlier.[23] By the last quarter of the 13th century, the batik cloth from Java has been exported to Karimata islands, Siam, even as far as Mosul.[24][page needed]

In Europe, the technique was described for the first time in the "History of Java", published in London in 1817 by Stamford Raffles, who had been a British governor of Bengkulu, Sumatra. In 1873 the Dutch merchant Van Rijckevorsel gave the pieces he collected during a trip to Indonesia to the ethnographic museum in Rotterdam. Today the Tropenmuseum houses the biggest collection of Indonesian batik in the Netherlands. Displayed at the Exposition Universelle at Paris in 1900, the Indonesian batik impressed the public and artists.[18]

The Dutch Indo Europeans and Chinese settlers were active in developing batik, particularly coastal batik, in the late colonial era. They introduced new patterns as well as the use of the cap (copper block stamps) to mass-produce batiks. Between 1811 and 1946, there was a breed of batik known as Batik Belanda. Which was basically a batik industry ran by the Indo Europeans in the East Indies. The patterns and styles reflected European style and taste with a fusion of local indigenous culture. It was quite successful, as such several prominent batik ateliers appeared and was exported to Singapore, and the Netherlands. The industry itself collapsed after WW II and the Indonesian independence.[25]

In the 1920s, Javanese batik makers migrating to Malay Peninsula (present-day Malaysia, South Thailand, and southern tip of Myanmar) introduced the use of wax and copper blocks to its east coast.[26]

In Subsaharan Africa, Javanese batik was introduced in the 19th century by Dutch and English merchants and batik makers. The local people there adapted the Javanese batik, making larger motifs with thicker lines and more colours. Locally it is known as African wax prints or Dutch wax prints. In the 1970s, batik was introduced to Australia, where aboriginal artists at Erna Bella have developed it as their own craft.[27]

In Africa, it was originally practised by the Yoruba tribe in Nigeria, Soninke and Wolof in Senegal.[18] This African version, however, uses cassava starch or rice paste, or mud as a resist instead of beeswax.[28]

Techniques

Written batik (batik tulis), drawing patterns with wax using canting in Java

Initially, batik making techniques only used "written batik" (batik tulis) techniques. This batik tulis is known as the original batik from generation to generation from the Indonesian nation's ancestors because the process and workmanship are still very traditional and manual. Then the technique developed with the discovery of the stamped batik (batik cap) technique which made batik work faster. The batik tulis and batik cap techniques are recognized by UNESCO as a Masterpiece of Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity from Indonesia because it still uses waxes in the making process.[1]

Written batik (batik tulis)

Written batik or batik tulis (Javanese script: ꦧꦠꦶꦏ꧀ꦠꦸꦭꦶꦱ꧀; Pegon: باتيق توليس) is made by writing wax liquid on the surface of the cloth with a tool called canting. Canting made of copper with a handle made of bamboo or wood. The making of hand-written batik takes approximately 1–3 months depending on the complexity and detail of batik. Because the working techniques are still traditional and manual, making hand-written batik takes longer and is more complicated than other batik techniques. In addition, the fundamental difference between written batik compared to other batik is that there are differences in each pattern, for example, a number of points or curved lines that are not the same because they are made manually. This characteristic of hand-written batik makes hand-written batik more valuable and unique compared to other batiks.[29][better source needed]

Stamped batik (batik cap), stamp wax-resin resist for batik with a cap tool in Java

Written batik technique is the most complicated, smooth, and longest process to work with, so a piece of original batik tulis cloth is usually sold at a higher price. However, this is the advantage of batik with the written process, which is more exclusive because it is purely handmade. In Indonesia, premium hand-written batik clothes are usually only worn by certain people at special events, in the form of long-sleeved shirts or modern batik dresses. The batik motif in Indonesia has developed depending on its history and place of origin.[30][better source needed]

Stamped batik (batik cap)

Stamped batik or batik cap (Javanese script: ꦧꦠꦶꦏ꧀ꦕꦥ꧀; Pegon: باتيق چڤ) is batik whose manufacturing process uses a stamp tool. This stamp tool is made of copper plates which form a batik motif on one of its surfaces. Stamp tool or canting cap is made by people who are experts in that field. Making batik with cap works the same way as using a stamp, but using waxes, not ink. This experience process is not easy to do. To make one piece of batik cloth, the process of deepening is carried out several times depending on the number of colors desired.[29] Cap is used to replacing the canting function so that it can shorten the manufacturing time. Batik cap is produced from the process of dyeing a tool made of copper which has been shaped in such a way on the cloth. The batik cap motif is considered to have less artistic value because all the motifs are exactly the same. The price of printed batik is cheaper than written batik because it can be made en masse.[31][better source needed]

Painted batik (batik lukis): a woman is making batik with a Rangda motif by using a brush.

The distinctive feature of batik cap can be seen from the repeating pattern and/or ornament motif. Historically, this batik cap process was discovered and popularized by the brethren as a solution to the limited capacity of batik production if it was only processed with hand-written techniques (batik tulis). The process of making this type of batik takes approximately 2–3 days. The advantages of batik cap are easier, faster batik processing, and the most striking of which is the more neat and repetitive motifs. While the drawbacks of batik cap include the mainstream design because it usually goes into mass production, in terms of art it looks stiffer and the motifs are not too detailed, and what is certain is the possibility of having the same batik as other people is greater.[30][better source needed]

Painted batik (batik lukis)

Indonesian Batik painting representing Rama-Sinta wayang figures

Painted batik, batik painting, or batik lukis (Javanese script: ꦧꦠꦶꦏ꧀ꦭꦸꦏꦶꦱ꧀; Pegon: باتيق لوكيس) is a technique of making batik by painting (with or without a pattern) on a white cloth using a medium or a combined medium like canting, brush, banana stalk, broomsticks, cotton, toothpicks, patchwork, or other media depending on the expression of a painter. Batik painting is the result of the development of batik art. The essence of batik painting is the process of making batik that does not use traditional motifs that are commonly found. The resulting motifs are the creation of the maker, usually producing contemporary (free) motifs or patterns with brighter, more striking colors, and more diverse color variations. The coloring in painted batik tends to be free and plays with many colors that are not often found in written batik (batik tulis). There are also gradation effects and other painting effects. The drawings are made as if painted batik is an ordinary painting poured on cloth using wax as the medium.[32]

In principle, painted batik is almost the same way with written batik in the making process. Because of the development of classic written batik, painted batik still contains the same elements as written batik in the aspects of materials, processing, coloring, and highlighting (removing the wax). But there are also many differences due to the influence of modern painting, such as in terms of appearance, especially in motifs and colors. The most important thing in making painted batik is the combination of the batik work and coloring depending on the taste of the batik maker. Painted batik is popular because it has a very affordable price and a very creative manufacturing process. Painted batik can be used as decoration or ready-to-wear clothing (fashion). Painted batik which has human objects, landscapes, still objects, and other objects, are in high demand for display paintings.[33][better source needed]

Making process

The making of Indonesian batik is a labor-intensive process.[5] The following are the stages in the process of making the original batik tulis cloth from the first steps to the last process: nyungging, njaplak, nglowong, ngiseni, nyolet, mopok, nembok, ngelir, nembok, the first nglorod, ngrentesi, nyumri, nyoja, and the second nglorod.[34][better source needed][35][better source needed]

Firstly, a cloth is washed, soaked, and beaten with a large mallet. Patterns are drawn with pencil and later redrawn using hot wax, usually made from a mixture of paraffin or beeswax, sometimes mixed with plant resins, which functions as a dye-resist. The wax can be applied with a variety of tools. A pen-like instrument called a canting (Javanese pronunciation: [tʃantiŋ], sometimes spelled with old Dutch orthography tjanting) is the most common. A canting is made from a small copper reservoir with a spout on a wooden handle. The reservoir holds the resist which flows through the spout, creating dots and lines as it moves. For larger patterns, a stiff brush may be used.[36] Alternatively, a copper block stamp called a cap (Javanese pronunciation: [tʃap]; old spelling tjap) is used to cover large areas more efficiently.[37][citation needed]

After the cloth is dry, the resist is removed by boiling or scraping the cloth. The areas treated with resist keep their original colour; when the resist is removed the contrast between the dyed and undyed areas forms the pattern.[38][better source needed] This process is repeated as many times as the number of colours desired.

The most traditional type of batik, called written batik (batik tulis), is drawn using only the canting. The cloth needs to be drawn on both sides and dipped in a dye bath three to four times. The whole process may take up to a year; it yields considerably finer patterns than stamped batik (batik cap).


čítajte viac o Batik


čítajte viac na tomto odkaze: Batik



Hladanie1.

Batik (disambiguation)
File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Katoenen wikkelrok met geometrisch patroon TMnr 5713-2.jpg
Surakarta
Central Java
Cambrics
Silk
Cotton
Indonesia
UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists
File:Women Making Batik, Ketelan crop.jpg
Java
Canting
Wax
Indonesia
Template:UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity/APA
Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity
UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists
File:Museum Batik.JPG
Pekalongan
Central Java
Indonesia
Template:UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity/APA
Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity
Javanese script
Help:Multilingual support#Javanese
Specials (Unicode block)#Replacement character
National costume of Indonesia
Resist dyeing
Dye
Java
Indonesia
Canting
Copper
Java
Acculturation
Wikipedia:Citation needed
Indonesian people
UNESCO
Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity
Indonesia
Batik Day
Indonesian language
UNESCO
Pekalongan
Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity
Javanese language
Indonesian language
Voiceless retroflex plosive
Lenition
Voiceless alveolar plosive
English language
Encyclopædia Britannica
Indonesian Archipelago
Netherlands
Sundanese language
File:Prajnaparamita clothes detail.JPG
East Java
Prajnaparamita of Java
National Museum of Indonesia
Jakarta
Java
Indonesia
Pribumi
Toraja
Flores
Halmahera
Hinduism
Ponorogo
File:Javanese batik ca. 1871.png
Semarang
Sarong
King of Siam
State visit
Sundanese people
Sanghyang Siksa Kandang Karesian
Kediri (historical kingdom)
East Java
Canting
Prajnaparamita of Java
Wikipedia:NOTRS
Nelumbo nucifera
Karimata Islands
Thailand
Mosul
Wikipedia:Citing sources
Europe
Stamford Raffles
Bengkulu
Sumatra
Van Rijckevorsel
Rotterdam
Tropenmuseum
Netherlands
Exposition Universelle (1900)
Malay Peninsula
Malaysia
South Thailand
Myanmar
Subsaharan Africa
African wax prints
Australia
Africa
Yoruba people
Nigeria
Soninke people
Wolof people
Cassava
Beeswax
File:Stone statue of Mahakala.jpg
Singhasari
East Java
File:Museum Volkenkunde Leiden stenen beeld 12.jpg
File:Stone statue of Durga.jpg
File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Batiksters aan het werk TMnr 20017682.jpg
Java
UNESCO
Masterpiece of Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity
Indonesia
Canting
Javanese script
Pegon script
Wikipedia:NOTRS
File:Printing wax-resin resist for Batik with a Tjap, Yogyakarta, 1996.jpg
Java
Wikipedia:NOTRS
Wikipedia:NOTRS
File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Een batikster tijdens het vervaardigen van een doek met een afbeelding van Rangda TMnr 20018445.jpg
Rangda
Wikipedia:NOTRS
File:Indonesian Batik painting representing Rama-Sinta wayang figures.jpg
Wayang
Wikipedia:NOTRS
Wikipedia:NOTRS
Wikipedia:NOTRS
Alkane
Beeswax
Canting
Help:IPA
Van Ophuijsen Spelling System
Help:IPA
Wikipedia:Citation needed
Wikipedia:NOTRS
File:Batik Trusmi Cirebon (45).jpg
File:Proses Nembok, Salah Satu Tahapan Membatik Tulis.jpg
File:Batik craftswomen in Java handmarking resist on batik tulis cloth with tjantings.jpg
Batik
Batik
Main Page
Wikipedia:Contents
Portal:Current events
Special:Random
Wikipedia:About
Wikipedia:Contact us
Special:FundraiserRedirector?utm source=donate&utm medium=sidebar&utm campaign=C13 en.wikipedia.org&uselang=en
Help:Contents
Help:Introduction
Wikipedia:Community portal
Special:RecentChanges
Wikipedia:File upload wizard
Main Page
Special:Search
Help:Introduction
Special:MyContributions
Special:MyTalk
Batik
باتيك
Batik
Batika
Batik
Batik
Batik
Батик
Батык
Батик
Bàtik
Batikování
Batik
Batika
Batik
Batik
Batiko
Batik
چاپ کلاقه‌ای
Batik
바틱
Batik
Բատիկ
Batik
Batik
Batik
בטיק
Bathik
Батик
Batiki
Batik
Batik
Ḅâṭèk
Батик
बाटिक काम
Batik
Batiak (kain)
Batikken
バティック
Batikk
Batik
Batik
Batik
Batik
Batic
Батик
Batik
Batik
Батик
Batik
Batik
Batiikki
Batik
Batik
บาติก
Батик
Batik
Батик (розпис)
Batik
蜡染
蠟染
蜡染
Special:EntityPage/Q635427#sitelinks-wikipedia
Batik
Talk:Batik
Batik
Batik
Special:WhatLinksHere/Batik
Special:RecentChangesLinked/Batik
Wikipedia:File Upload Wizard
Special:SpecialPages
Special:EntityPage/Q635427
Category:Batik
Wikipedia:Good articles*
Batik
Batik
Main Page
Wikipedia:Contents
Portal:Current events
Special:Random
Wikipedia:About
Wikipedia:Contact us
Special:FundraiserRedirector?utm source=donate&utm medium=sidebar&utm campaign=C13 en.wikipedia.org&uselang=en
Help:Contents
Help:Introduction
Wikipedia:Community portal
Special:RecentChanges
Wikipedia:File upload wizard
Main Page
Special:Search
Help:Introduction
Special:MyContributions
Special:MyTalk
Batik
باتيك
Batik
Batika
Batik
Batik
Batik
Батик
Батык
Батик
Bàtik
Batikování
Batik
Batika
Batik
Batik
Batiko
Batik
چاپ کلاقه‌ای
Batik
바틱
Batik
Բատիկ
Batik
Batik
Batik
בטיק
Bathik
Батик
Batiki
Batik
Batik
Ḅâṭèk
Батик
बाटिक काम
Batik
Batiak (kain)
Batikken
バティック
Batikk
Batik
Batik
Batik
Batik
Batic
Батик
Batik
Batik
Батик
Batik
Batik
Batiikki
Batik
Batik
บาติก
Батик
Batik
Батик (розпис)
Batik
蜡染
蠟染
蜡染
Updating...x




Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok.
Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.