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Indonesian History
Traditional
Performing Arts of IndonesiaThe sober, majestic, and
profound court arts of eastern and central Java, where Javanese is spoken, include wayang
kulit shadow theatre, wayang orang unmasked dance, and wayang topeng masked dance.
Shadow-puppet theatre.
It is uncertain whether the shadow theatre is indigenous to Java or was brought from
India, but the wayang kulit technique of having a single seated puppeteer who manipulates
puppets, sings, chants narration, and speaks dialogue seems to be an Indonesian invention.
Unlike most court arts, wayang kulit has had centuries of performance in the folk
tradition as well, so that today, with several thousand puppeteers active, it is the
strongest traditional theatre form in Southeast Asia.
Plays are set in mythological times, some relating to indigenous animistic festivals
and worship of local spirits, some directly dramatizing episodes from the Ramayana and
Mahabharata epics, while the majority--the Pandawa (Pandav in Sanskrit) cycle of about 100
plays--are essentially Javanese creations in which the five heroic Pandawa brothers are
placed in different situations. Three and sometimes four god-clown-servants and a set of
ogre-antagonists who are not in the epics at all suggest how far removed the shadow plays
are from the epics.

Wayang Kulit
The wayang puppeteer works within one of the world's most carefully organized
performing arts, making possible a virtually solo performance without intermission, from
around nine at night until the gray before dawn. Each play is in three parts, coordinated
with three keys of music played by the gamelan ensemble. Certain standard scenes appear in
a standard order, though some may be dropped. "Opening Audience" introduces the
play's conflict, "Inner Palace" shows the king meeting his queen(s), and in
"Outer Audience" the army is dispatched. In "Forest Clearing" the
first battle scene occurs, and in "Foreign Audience" the antagonist kingdom,
usually one of overseas ogres, is introduced. Concluding part one are "Foreign Outer
Audience," in which the second army marches forth, and "Opening Skirmish,"
a battle scene between the two armies. The puppeteer chooses from among 150 musical
selections, matched to scene type, character, mood, or action. The puppet figures are
carved to indicate character type and status according to fixed patterns for nose, eyes,
gaze, stance, body build, and costume. The puppeteer can choose one or another puppet of
the same character, coloured gold or black or with a stern or relaxed countenance, to
indicate the mood of the figure in a particular scene. In battle scenes, he develops
individual encounters between opponents, drawing upon a repertory of 119 movements that
are classified for use by god, female, refined hero, muscular hero, ogre, or monkey.
Formula narrative phrases describe famous kingdoms and characters, and battles are
preceded by challenges couched in standard phrases. Although the puppeteer works only from
a brief scenario, he is able to extemporize each performance, adding contemporary jokes
for the clowns and molding the performance to suit the occasion and the audience. He and
his supporting musicians and female singers are improvising within completely known,
although exceptionally complex and subtle, artistic conventions.
This artistic system, developed within the shadow theatre for performance of Pandawa
plays, has proven to work so well that it has been widely imitated. The entire body of
wayang kulit drama was adopted in Bali and in Malaysia. At least 25 other play cycles have
been performed in Indonesia as shadow drama within this system, including the Pandji cycle
(wayang gedog), Islamic Amir Hamzah plays (wayang menak), and plays dramatizing the
revolutionary struggle against the Dutch (wayang suluh). The Pandawa wayang kulit
repertory was transposed to the doll-puppet theatre (wayang golek) in Sunda, the western
part of Java, and to dance-drama in eastern and central Java (wayang orang) and in Bali
(wayang wong).
Performances are commissioned for special occasions and usually can be interpreted in
religious or mystical fashion. There may be offertory plays at harvest time or animistic,
ritualistic exorcisms protecting children from being devoured by the voracious god Kala.
In The Reincarnation of Rama the divine attributes of the god Wisnu
(Vishnu in Sanskrit) reincarnate in Ardjuna (Arjuna), hero of the Pandawa cycle and
ancestor of the Javanese race. The translucent screen can be interpreted as heaven, the
banana-log stage as earth, the puppets as man, and the puppeteer as god, and the Pandawas
can symbolize the manifold attributes of righteous behaviour.
Wayang topeng.
Masked dance was also popular at the eastern Javanese courts (c. 1000-1400) and may be
related to ancient animistic masked dance seen throughout the Pacific islands. Later,
Indian dance style was assimilated, and sometime after the 15th century at the earliest,
the Pandji story was dramatized. This is wayang topeng, widely performed as both a
sophisticated and a folk art throughout Indonesia. Unlike the large-scale unmasked
dance-drama, topeng dance focusses on interpreting character through solo dance.

Wayang Topeng
Wayang orang.
Java's spectacular dance-drama, wayang orang, grew out of the strong unmasked dance
tradition that is illustrated in reliefs of female dancers carved on the 9th-century
Borobudur and Prambanan temples in central Java and that produced the carefully cultivated
female group dances of the Surakarta and Jogjakarta courts after their establishment in
the 16th century. Of the latter dances, two stand out, the almost sacred bedaja, which
even today is danced only in court surroundings, and the srimpi, in which two pairs of
girls execute a delicate slow-motion duel with daggers and bows. In the middle of the 18th
century, wayang kulit's Rama and Pandawa plays were set to court dance to form wayang
orang, or "human" wayang. The music, narrative, and dramatic organization of the
shadow play was kept largely intact, many of the actors' movements mimicking the stiff
actions of the puppets, while new dance sections were added. Court performances stopped
with World War II, but wayang orang continues to be performed by some 20 to 30
professional troupes in major cities. In popular performances, attractive actresses play
the roles of such refined heroes as Ardjuna and humour and spectacle take precedence over
dance.

Wayang Orang
Ketoprak and ludruk.
Two other types of popular theatre, ketoprak and ludruk,
were performed in Java by 150 to 200 professional troupes. Ketoprak, created by a
Surakarta court official in 1914, evolved into a spoken drama of Javanese and Islamic
history in which the clown figure is a spokesman of the common man. Whereas ketoprak is
performed primarily in central Java, ludruk, a spoken drama that handles mainly
contemporary subject matter, is performed in eastern Java by both amateur and professional
troupes. Though ludruk is relatively realistic, male actors play all roles. Songs and
dances, accompanied by gamelan music, are performed between acts in both forms.
Sundanese performing arts.
There are three main performing arts in the Sundanese area of western Java. Reog, a kind of urban folk performance, can be seen especially in the
streets of Jakarta: two or three men improvise popular songs, dances, and dramatic
sketches for a neighbourhood audience in this type of entertainment. Wayang golek is a
performance based on wayang kulit but using doll puppets without a screen. Approximately
500 Sundanese puppeteers perform wayang golek. Female singers, who are almost as important
as the puppeteer, respond to requests and gifts of money by singing song after song and
virtually stopping the play. Sandiwara troupes in Jakarta, Bandung, and a score of other
cities perform both wayang stories in the form of Sundanese dance-drama and spoken
historical and contemporary dramas for popular audiences. Sundanese-style court dances and
topeng masked dances are often performed solo at festivals and for circumcision or wedding
celebrations in private homes. Sundanese dance is more sensuous than Javanese and broader
in style.
Balinese dance-drama.
Of the many factors that have contributed to the remarkable flourishing of dance and
drama on the island of Bali for more than a millennium, three are of particular note.
First, Bali remained isolated from both Islam and the West. Second, there was a merging of
folk and court performance styles into a single communal tradition appreciated by all.
Third, dances and plays are indissolubly linked to the recurring cycles of local festivals
and rituals whereby the well-being of the community is maintained against constantly
threatening malicious forces in the spirit world. From the verve and brilliance of
Balinese performances it is clear not only that the people like to perform but also that
there exists some culturally determined compulsion to do so.
Balinese dance and dramatic forms are so numerous that only a few can be noted.
Balinese villagers playing in the barong exorcism dance-drama are not merely actors
exercising theatrical skills. The actors' bodies, going into a trance, are believed to
receive the spirits of Rangda and the Barong, and it is the spirits themselves that do
battle. Thus the performance is actually more a ritual than a piece of theatre. The sanghyang dance is usually performed by two young girls who gradually go
into a state of trance as women sing in chorus and incense is wafted about them.
Supposedly entered by the spirit of the nymph Supraba, the girls rise and dance, often
acrobatically, though they have been chosen from among girls untrained in dance. The
dance's purpose is to entice Supraba to the village to gain her blessing when evil forces
threaten. In the ketjak, or monkey dance, as many as 150 village men,
sitting in concentric circles around a flaming lamp, chant and gesticulate in unison
until, in trance, they appear to have become ecstatically possessed by the spirits of
monkeys. This performance, however, has no ritual function of altering an earthly
condition.

Barong Dance
That the Balinese wayang kulit may represent the older style of wayang, known on Java
before the coming of Islam, is suggested by the less stylized shape of the puppets, by the
shorter performing time of four to five hours, and by the simple music of only four
gender, a bronze instrument similar to a xylophone with resonance chambers underneath,
from the gamelan ensemble. In one type of shadow play having a special religious
significance, the puppets perform before a screen during the daytime, and the puppeteer is
seen in his role as a Brahman priest, bare to the waist. In the redjang processional
dance, village women symbolically offer their bodies to their temple gods.
Because Balinese performing arts are vitally alive, they change from decade to decade,
even from year to year. The gambuh, respected for its age, contains elements of dramatic
dance, song, narrative, and characterization found in later forms. It is thought dull,
however, and is seldom performed, though it is believed to have provided the model for the
singing style of popular ardja opera troupes and the dance style of the lovely girls'
legong. Wayang wong is analogous to the Javanese wayang orang, but masks are worn and the
repertory is limited to Rama plays. Pandawa plays are staged in identical style but are
called parwa. It has been suggested that these forms also stem, at least in part, from
gambuh. Wayang topeng masked-dance plays are ancient, being mentioned in a palm-leaf
document of 1058. The Javanese chronicle of the Majapahit period (c. 1293-1520), the
Pararaton, in which Ken Angrok is the hero, is a favourite tapeng story. This points to
the strong influence exerted by Javanese on Balinese arts after the Majapahit court was
transferred to Bali in the 16th century to escape Islamic domination.