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#1 |
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 59
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Some pictures of what I am talking about. The one that resembles kupu tarung / tumpuk is said to be tangguh Majapahit by the owner. Note that different lighting produces different color hue of the iron.
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#2 |
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Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 6,992
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Would a full length photo of these blades be possible?
Yes, we do understand that different lighting can produce different effects in the image produced. |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 59
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Unfortunately, no ... the owner sold the keris to someone else not long after I took the picture about 7 months ago. Back then I was such a neophyte that when I took pictures I only cared about the detail texture of the iron. I haven't learned the importance of dhapur and wangun yet ...
I will find some other photographs to illustrate what I meant. Meanwhile, without considering the overall dhapur (let's assume it's within the acceptable tangguh standards), is it possible for krisses from Majapahit or before to have different color tone of iron and slorok as seen from the picture? Thanks for looking at the thread ![]() Last edited by Neo; 29th August 2010 at 12:26 PM. |
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#4 |
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Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 6,992
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Neo, there is no need for you to find other photos to illustrate your point. I was interested in seeing the complete keris that was made of the material shown in your photo and that was claimed to be Majapahit.
Were I you, I would not concern myself much about not having obtained it. Tangguh is an opinion. It is an opinion of a classification that can be applied to a blade. Keris that are classified as Majapahit normally do have a core (slorok) Keris that are classified into the eras that fall prior to Majapahit also will usually have a core. However some keris which truly date from the actual time period prior to Majapahit will most often not have a core, however, these keris will not be classified as Jenggolo or whatever, but as Buda. There are at least two ways of accepting the tangguh system:- you can accept it as a classification system that uses the names of Javanese eras and historical periods as the names of those classifications, or you can accept that the classifications truly relate to the era or historical period. In the first instance you are subscribing to belief in a system of classification, in the second instance you are subscribing to an element that is part of a system of belief. One acceptance is not more correct than the other, the relevance of the acceptance depends upon your state of mind. |
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#5 |
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 59
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Many thanks for the clarification, Mr. Maisey. As for now, I am more interested in recognizing an ORIGINAL keris from a fake one than in correctly putting a tangguh label on the keris. By original, I mean it may be a Budo, a sepuh, a nem, a kamardikan contemporary, or even an antique putran, but at least it's not a modern pretender made to fool collectors.
Prior to your answer, I had suspected that a sepuh keris is not supposed to have distinguishable slorok, no matter how subtle. So, based on this understanding, kerises that has Pajajaran features (high gandik, matching iron grains and pamor characteristics, among others), but then it after looking at the blade closely under strong lighting it has subtle different color tones indicating that it has a slorok, then that means the blade is either an antique retrofit (it was made in the past as a putran of an earlier style) or a modern pretender made from old material. Perhaps I misinterpreted information from the following website: http://www.kerisdanuri.fotopic.net/c1655009.html Many thanks for your answer. |
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#6 |
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Join Date: May 2006
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It is not yet 7am here, and in 20 minutes I'm off to Canberra to visit the National Gallery. Right now I do not have time to provide the comments needed from your last post. I'll try to get to this as soon as I can.
In the interim, could you oblige by letting us know where you are located? Are you a native speaker of Indonesian? Thanks. |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 59
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Take your time. I'm sorry I just read this message on 1:20pm Bali time. I live in Bali and Indonesian is my native tongue. PM me if you need more info.
Thanks! |
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