- Collection type
- Object
- Description
- Cloth patterned by the "tie-and-dye" process and woven on a loom. [CW 15 6 98]
- Long description
- Cloth made from two lengths of cloth stitched together. It is a fine cloth with warp faced ikat and a twining border at both the cut ends. It is predominanatly red in colour. [JN]
- Person
- Field collector Charles Anthony Johnson Brooke
- PRM source Third Rajah of Sarawak, Charles Vyner de Windt Brooke
- PRM source Bertram Norman Sergison Brooke
- Date / Period
- Date made: Before 1923
- Date collected
- By 1923
- Acquisition information
- Donated: 1923
- Materials and processes
- Material Textile, Material Pigment, Process Ikat Resist Dyed, Process Woven
- Dimensions
- Width 1040 mm, Length 2320 mm approx
- Object numbers
- Accession number: 1923.86.79
- Research and responses
Traude Gavin, author of The Women's Warpath: Iban Ritual Fabrics from Borneo (Los Angeles: UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History, 1966), states that the pattern of this cloth "is known in some Iban areas (Baleh, Ulu Ai) as the Rang Jugah pattern (compare Gavin 1996:43). However, if these cloths come form another area, the pattern may not be known there by this name". Commenting on Hepple's statement that this is 'a blanket for dreaming in', Traude Gavin says that "Iban pua kumbu are not for everyday wear, but only for ritual use. One ritual function was to sleep covered by a pua kumbu to attract dreams of spirit helpers, or dreams for guidance before important undertakings. This is done rarely today." She notes that there are many other ritual functions for Iban ritual textiles. Notes in RDF under 1923.86.83-94. [CF 24/7/2002]
1923.86.79
Cloth patterned by the "tie-and-dye" process and woven on a loom. [CW 15 6 98]
1923.86.79
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