Wax resist dyeing technique in fabric is an ancient art form.  Discoveries show it already existed in Egypt in the 4th century BCE,  where it was used to wrap mummies; linen was soaked in wax, and  scratched using a sharp tool. In Asia, the technique was practised in  China during the T'ang dynasty (618-907 CE), and in India and  Japan during the Nara period (645-794 CE). In  Africa it was originally practised by the Yoruba  tribe in Nigeria, Soninke and Wolof  in Senegal.[5]
In Java,  Indonesia,  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.[5]  On the other hand, JLA. Brandes (a Dutch archeologist) and F.A.  Sutjipto (an Indonesian archeologist) believe Indonesian batik is a  native tradition, regions such as Toraja, Flores, Halmahera,  and Papua, which were not directly  influenced by Hinduism and have an old age tradition of batik making.[6]
Rouffaer also reported that the gringsing pattern was already  known by the 12th century in Kediri, East  Java. He concluded that such a delicate pattern could only be  created by means of the canting (also spelled tjanting or tjunting;  pronounced [ˌtʃanˈtiŋ]) tool. He  proposed that the canting was invented in Java around that time.[6]  The carving details of clothes wore by Prajnaparamita, the statue of buddhist  goddess of transcendental wisdom from East Java circa 13th century CE.  The clothes details shows intricate floral pattern similar to today  traditional Javanese batik. This suggested intricate batik fabric  pattern applied by canting already existed in 13th century Java  or even earlier.
Batik was mentioned in the 17th century Malay  Annals. The legend goes when Laksamana Hang Nadim was ordered by Malacca King, Sultan Mahmud, to sail to India to get 140  pieces of serasah cloth (batik) with 40 types of flowers depicted  on each. Unable to find any that fulfilled the requirements explained  to him, he made up his own. On his return unfortunately, his ship sank  and he only managed to bring four pieces, earning displeasure from the  Sultan.[7][8]
In Europe, the technique is described for the first time in the History  of Java, published in London in 1817 by Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles who had been a British governor for the  island. In 1873 the Dutch merchant Van Rijckevorsel gave the pieces  he collected during a trip to Indonesia to the ethnographic museum in  Rotterdam. Today Tropenmuseum houses the biggest collection of  Indonesian batik in the Netherlands.  The Dutch were active in developing batik in the colonial era, they  introduced new innovations and prints. And it was indeed starting from  the early 19th century that the art of batik really grew finer and  reached its golden period. Exposed to the Exposition Universelle at  Paris in 1900, the Indonesian batik impressed the public and the  artisans.[5]  After the independence of Indonesia and the decline of the Dutch  textile industry, the Dutch batik production was lost. The Gemeentemuseum, Den Haag contains artifacts from that era.
Due to globalization and industrialization, which introduced  automated techniques, new breeds of batik, known as batik cap ([ˈtʃap]) and batik print  emerged, and the traditional batik, which incorporates the hand written wax-resist  dyeing  technique is known now as batik tulis (lit: 'Written Batik').
At the same time, according to the Museum of Cultural History of  Oslo, Indonesian immigrants to Malaysia brought the art with them. As  late as the 1920s Javanese batik makers introduced the use of wax and  copper blocks on Malaysia's east coast. The production of hand drawn  batik in Malaysia is of recent date and is related to the Javanese batik  tulis.[9]
In Sub Sahara Africa, Javanese batik was introduced in the 19th  century by Dutch and English traders. The local people there adapted the  Javanese batik, making larger motifs, thicker lines and more colors. In  the 1970s, batik was introduced to the aboriginal community in  Australia, the aboriginal community at Erna bella and Utopia now  developed it as their own craft
03.04
indigenous  cultures in Indonesia


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