Tohpati Village is widely known as the center of handmade Balinese
batik with various colors and shapes. Here the visitors will be exhibited the
batik making and hand weaving process. Finally you can buy some to bring home.
The specialties of Balinese Batik can be seen from the strong Javanese motifs,
some of modern Batik applies the painting objects such as Balinese culture,
ceremonies, beautiful site or mythological figures. Batik is one of the most
beautiful wearable art and the approach to the other side of Balinese rich
culture.
History of Batik :
Evidence of early examples of batik have been
found in the Far East, Middle East, Central Asia and India from over
2000 years ago. It is conceivable that these areas developed
independently, without the influence from trade or cultural exchanges.
However, it is more likely that the craft spread from Asia to the
islands of the Malay Archipelago and west to the Middle East through the
caravan route. Batik was practised in China as early as the Sui Dynasty
(AD 581-618). These were silk batiks and these have also been
discovered in Nara, Japan in the form of screens and ascribed to the
Nara period (AD 710-794). It is probable that these were made by Chinese
artists. They are decorated with trees, animals, flute players, hunting
scenes and stylised mountains.
No evidence of very old cotton batiks have been found in India but
frescoes in the Ajunta caves depict head wraps and garments which could
well have been batiks. In Java and Bali temple ruins contain figures
whose garments are patterned in a manner suggestive of batik. By 1677
there is evidence of a considerable export trade, mostly on silk from
China to Java, Sumatra, Persia and Hindustan. In Egypt linen and
occasionally woollen fabrics have been excavated bearing white patterns
on a blue ground and are the oldest known and date from the 5th century
A.D. They were made in Egypt, possibly Syria. In central Africa resist
dyeing using cassava and rice paste has existed for centuries in the
Yoruba tribe of Southern Nigeria and Senegal.
Indonesia, most particularly the island of Java, is the area where
batik has reached the greatest peak of accomplishment. The Dutch brought
Indonesian craftsmen to teach the craft to Dutch warders in several
factories in Holland from 1835. The Swiss produced imitation batik in
the early 1940s. A wax block form of printing was developed in Java
using a cap.
By the early 1900s the Germans had developed mass production of
batiks. There are many examples of this form of batik as well as
hand-produced work in many parts of the world today. Computerisation of
batik techniques is a very recent development.
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