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| Wayang Golek | 
The
 painted wooden       puppets on the preceding page are old examples 
from the still thriving and       important folk art puppet theater of 
Java in Indonesia.        Although tourist shops now sell imitations of wayang golek
 puppets,       the puppets illustrated on these pages were actually 
used for many years in       theater productions--in presentations of 
Hindu epics, Javanese history       plays and the Islamic Menak cycles. 
These performances were given in towns       and villages on holidays 
and for a variety of festivals, as were the       distinctive 
shadow-puppet plays.  A dalang, or puppet master,       
manipulated the puppets, spoke their parts, and coordinated the puppets'
       actions with music from a gamelan orchestra.
| Tatang Haryana And Wayang Golek | 
Like so many other crafts in Indonesia, making wayang       golek
 is a skill handed down through families. The master puppet-maker       
usually makes the head because it expresses the personality of the 
puppet.       Ceremonies are performed before commencing a deity or a 
demon. A piece of       light, local softwood, which is easy to carve 
and not too heavy to hold up       during a performance, is sawed or 
chopped down to the right size, and the       main features are roughly 
chiseled. After sanding, fine decorations such       as the parts of a 
crown are carved in with more care and sanded. The       smooth surface 
receives a coat of glue-based paint, which will enable       subsequent 
coats to adhere well.  Lips, flowers and some bits of       jewelry are 
painted red, as are the irises of angry characters. Blue is       also 
used for eyes and sapphire jewelry. Fine black lines are painted for    
   eyes, eyebrows, moustaches and wisps of hair....Bodies are often made
 by       younger members of the family, and arms are attached at the 
elbow and       shoulders with string so that they move easily. The 
shapes of hands also       express character and role; those of nobles 
stretch out gracefully, but       servants and commoners have large open
 palms. A rod passes from a hole in       the base of the puppet's head 
and down through the body to form a handle.       Costumes are usually 
made by wives. ...Since the stories portray       historical and human 
rather than divine affairs, the puppets, like those       used for 
history plays, are always fully clothed in Central Javanese       
traditional dress with batik sarongs.
Puppet body types can be       identified across a spectrum which ranges from alus (extremely       refined) to kasar
 (extremely rough and crude).  Refined,       virtuous characters have 
small dainty bodies, slitted oval eyes with       pupils shaped like 
rice grains, pointed noses and a modest downward       gaze...  Vigorous
 or turbulent characters have a more direct and       confrontational 
stare. As the personality of the puppet becomes less       refined, 
there is an increase in size; the nose becomes heavier and       
blunter; eyes and pupils become larger and rounder and the gaze more    
   aggressive; teeth and gums may be exposed in a snarl or a foolish    
   sneer.  The more refined middle-sized puppets may represent       
courageous but impetuous kings and heroes; the coarser ones suggest an  
     uncontrolled or evil nature. The largest puppets are used for those
 whose       greatest attribute is physical strength.
The most       frequently performed narratives derive from the Hindu epics. The Arjuna       Sasra Bahu and Ramayana cycles
 concern the affairs of the noble       Rama himself and his ancestors. 
Favorite stories concern Rama's marriage       to Sinta; their 
banishment to the forest together with his brother       Laksmana; 
Sinta's abduction by the monster king Rahwana; and her       subsequent 
rescue, with the aid of the monkey king and after numerous       
battles, from  the kingdom of Sri Lanka. The Ramayana contains   
    many episodes from the lives of these characters which are 
emphasized in       varying degrees to form separate plays in their own 
right.
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| Pandawa Brothers | 
The Mahahharata
 tells of the       conflict between the superior Pandawa brothers 
(Judistra, Bima, Arjuna,       Nakula and Sadewa) and their hundred 
jealous and mendacious cousins, the       Kurewas, who drive them away 
from their home at the court of Astina, to       wander in the wild.  In
 the forest the Pandewas build the lovely and       idealized kingdom of
 Amarta where the majority of the plays are set. The       heroic 
quests, battles with vile ogres and scenes of romantic love are       
made all the more poignant by the knowledge that the glory and beauty 
are       fleeting. Events are presented as taking place in Java rather 
than India,       and the heroic Pandewas, descendants of Vishnu, are 
the ancestors of the       Javanese kings. Many episodes have simply 
been invented by puppeteers over       generations.
| Tatang Haryana Play Wayang Golek | 
The
 court scenes also allow scope       for the comic misadventures and 
intrigue of the Pandewas' clown servants,       the Punakawans:  Semar 
the wise, whose identity is thought to have       evolved from that of 
the pre-Hindu Javanese god Ismaya and his sons. The       inane and 
melancholic Gareng, with his round drooping nose, is the butt of       
jokes and tricks played by the sharp Petruk. Philosophical and mystical 
      speculations made by the refined characters provide an 
intellectual and       spiritual dimension for members of the audience 
with a taste for high       seriousness.


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but it just go with you. wish you a happy Wednesday, Dieter
I wish you a pleasant Wednesday afternoon
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ReplyDeletehttp://i44.tinypic.com/r8i5qr.png Have a very nice new week. Hugs
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