Weaving for Development: An Ethnographic Study on How the Ibans
of West Kalimantan Determines the Color of Pua Kumbu
Nita Trismaya
1
, A. Cahyo Nugroho
2
and Semiarto Purwanto
3
1
Sekolah Tinggi Desain Interstudi
2
Semarak Cerlang Nusa Consultancy, Research and Education for Social Transformation
3
Department of Anthropology, University of Indonesia
Keywords: color, selection, composition, pua kumbu, traditional weaving, Iban, West Kalimantan, Indonesia
Abstract: Color is a cultural expression derived from the culturalknowledge of particular social groups. Culture in the
form of local tradition determine the color composition and selection can be seen in tenun or traditional
weaving. Almost every tenun uses natural dyes will come-up with soft, darker, and other low intensity of
colors. It is considered that local technology gives a limitationto the crafters to produce brighter colors. The
changes brought by modernization today has, however, enabled them to have more choices in colors since
the use of colorful thread is commonly found now. Our short ethnographic observation, conducting
intensively for one month in some Iban communities in Kapuas Hulu, West Kalimantan has shown us that
color composition and selection is in fact not a simple matter. Research notice that color selection is in most
cases very impersonal and sacred, and is made based on dreams, symbols, and the experience of respective
crafters who mostly women. When an empowerment program for women introduced by a national NGO,
which encourages peoples to produce more pua kumbu or Ibanese tenun, the color selection was done by
also considering the market demands. Eventually, this market-driven production produces a new cultural
problem for the Iban crafters.
1 INTRODUCTION
Iban people are one of the ethnic groups that inhabit
Borneo Island which is included in the generic
category of ethnic Dayak people. The distribution of
Iban people covers the northern part of the island’s
northwestern side. Most of Ibans live in Sarawak
which is part of the Federation of Malaysia. In
addition to Sarawak, settlements of the Ibans can
also be found in several locations in Brunei and
Sabah. A small group of Iban people lives in several
villages in the West Kalimantan Province,
Indonesia. The villages were spread from the Badau
region in the west to the Putussibau area in the east.
The Ibans who are living in Kapuas Hulu have
strong historical and kinship ties with the Iban
people who livein Sarawak. These kinship ties are
formed together with the migration process for
various reasons, in which economic factor is also
one of that reasons. Weaving as one of the products
of the Iban Dayak tradition has an essential meaning
in their daily life. The presence of weavinginthe
wholelife of the Iban community can be divided into
three domains, namely (1) the momentum of
transitioning stages of human life, such as birth,
marriage, and death (2) large parties of customs and
devices and (3) kinship identities. The tradition of
making weaving originated came from betang house
that has been inhabited by three generations: the first
generation is the grandmother, the second generation
is the children and the third generation is the
grandchildren. According to the first and second
generation weavers, they started to learn about
weaving at an early age through a gradual learning
process. Weaving skills are acquired through
everyday practice, the weavers got the knowledge
from the previous generations and practiced the
skills while helping other weavers. Weaving skills
were passed down from generation to generation
through oral tradition. The weaving techniques were
not recorded in any written form. There is no
standard pattern in studying weaving and there is
nodefinite age to start studying it. In Iban
community, there are four weaving techniques,
namely kebat, pilih and sungkit which have not
changed much from the beginning until now,
whilesidantechnique has only been known for over
20 years as well.
356
Trismaya, N., Nugroho, A. and Purwanto, S.
Weaving for Development: An Ethnographic Study on How the Ibans of West Kalimantan Determines the Color of Pua Kumbu.
DOI: 10.5220/0009931003560363
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Recent Innovations (ICRI 2018), pages 356-363
ISBN: 978-989-758-458-9
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
Woven fabric made by the Iban people is
included in the category of warp ikat which those
ornaments are woven into their warp and this are the
oldest weaving technique in Indonesia. The
distribution of warp ikat area covers the Sulawesi
region in Rongkong and Galumpang in TanaToraja,
also Bentenan and Rantahan in the Minahasa Bantik.
In North Sumatra, there is Batak. In East Nusa
Tenggara there are Sumba, Flores, Sawu, Roti,
Ndao, East Timor. In Kalimantan, especially in West
Central and East region.
Based on the tradition of Iban weaving, there are
things that have very close relations between the
symbols and its functions, namely motives and
color. Weaving technique means how about to
weave warp threads into weft threads become motifs
appropriate to design itself, including determining
the color composition. Color plays a vital role in
woven fabric because the tradition of ethnicity in an
area is described by color. Some colors in the classic
tradition have ritual symbols and functions, such as
the using of black color for grieving or black color
will bringbad elements, so they avoided it as
dominant inIban woven. Those motives in Iban
weaving are mostly taken from the surrounding
environment such as crocodiles, snakes, roots, and
others where the color system used it to associate
with nature itself.
Those motives in Iban woven are divided into
two categories: sacred motives and profane motives.
Sacred motifs (Pusaka and Khusus) are classic
motifs and have certain meanings whose source of
inspiration is obtained through dreams. The motives
that included in the Pusaka Sacred category are
Naga, Nabau and Antu, while those belonging to the
Khusus Sacred motives are Humans, Beasts, Baya
and Junan. Profane motives are more dynamic, not
have many conditions and abstinence that must be
considered as well as sacred motives. The idea of
making these motives usually imitate from the motif
in the woven mat, from old fabric or creates itself
based on market tastes. Flower patterns, leaves and
geometric patterns are also commonly used as filler
motifs. These motives are mostly made by beginner
weavers or market-oriented weavers with an
emphasis on aesthetic concepts.
The color used in Iban weaving are produced
from the processing of natural materials from the
area surrounding tribe, and it produces four colors,
namely red, blue, black and white. For Iban people,
color and motif are an integral and inseparable
characteristic of woven traditions that telling a lot of
things which they had created. Color selection is
also carried out with special considerations, for
example, the red color is a symbol of the courage of
the Ibans and there are also restrictions on using
black as a dominant color in weaving.
As time changes, there were changes in the
orientation of the Iban weavers motivation in
making fabrics, from weaving for the daily and
cultural need to weaving for sale. Women's
empowerment programs introduced by the
government and NGOs had encouraged weavers to
recognize consumer needs, which then resulted in
the increasing production of woven fabrics
according to market demand. It raises some problem
that weavers are facing market demands that are no
longer oriented towards preserving traditional
values. The production of woven fabric is also no
longer in the form of a piece of cloth, but it shifts to
functional forms such as bags, wallets, and scarves.
Those composition color in weaving become more
diverse and has no longer taboos and symbolic
meanings. Specifically, regarding coloring, NGOs
have encouraged Iban weavers to return for using
natural dyes which in the 1980s the use of synthetic
dyes was once the primary choice of weavers.
Market orientation on woven fabric has brought new
values in Iban culture which has two sides, namely
in the economic sectorand in the original traditions
of the Iban community.
A question raises from the problem stated above
is: how far will the market orientation change the
Iban tradition of weaving? How do Iban weavers
maintain their traditional coloring system in weaving
designs to suit market taste? What goals do NGOs
want to which advise weavers to return to using
natural dyes?
2 METHODS
Data for this documentation were obtained from
interviews and observations of our informants that
relevant to the topic of Iban weaving, natural dyes,
ASPPUK field officers (NGOs that provide
assistance to weavers), and some figures who
understand the culture of Iban people in general. The
research process is carried out at the level of the
longhouse which is usually found in the hamlet or
village.
The villages and hamlets that became the study
area included sub-districts consisting of 10 hamlets
or dusun namely Dusun Tekalong in Lanjak Deras
Village, then Dusun Kampung Sawah, Dusun
Sungai Sedik, Dusun Sungai Luar and Dusun Sungai
Long in Desa Sungai Abau. In Desa Mensiau,
includesDusun Entebuluh, Dusun Kluin, Dusun
Engkadan,andDusun Kelawik. In Desa Labian only
Weaving for Development: An Ethnographic Study on How the Ibans of West Kalimantan Determines the Color of Pua Kumbu
357
one hamlet namely Dusun Ngaung Keruh. The
research method used was participant-observation,
immersion, interview, documentation through
photos. Primary data obtained through field
observation for approximately one month, while
secondary data gathered through books and
scientific articles.
Our observation method is done by observing the
entire stages of the weaving technique starting from
the preparation stage, the coloring stage to the
weaving stage. We did not only documented it but
also participated in those stages. For immersion
methods, we lived with the locals in a number of
houses to get more accurate information and data by
experiencing their daily life.
3 RESULTS
As quoted from Kartiwa (2007), pua is a cloth that
functions as a blanket, a ceremony cloth that is hung
in abetang house, used to treat sick people, and
becomes a symbol of social status. The length of the
fabric reaches two and a half meters and is almost
one and a half meters wide. One type of pua is pua
kumbu, based on our research in the field, pua
kumbu is made of kebat weaving techniques and has
symbolic meaning inthe motif. Pua kumbu serves as
a sacred woven cloth such as the shade of a
ceremony of a newborn baby and the death
ceremony also. Pua Kumbu also serves as a cover
for offerings at custom events, as well as wall
hangings to be exhibited. Pua Kumbu which has a
high sacred value which is a woven cloth that is used
to receive the head of pengayauan and will be used
as a ceremonial center where the pua will wrap the
central pole of gawai (sandung) together with the
mat. Besides being exhibited, pua kumbu is also
used for clothes and cloth by all Iban people. The
use of the two ingredients displayed on the wall to
be exhibited is also used to entertain people from
Khayangan (Pangau) who go down during the
gawai. The essence of the gawai itself is to thank
you for the past and hope for a better fortune in the
future. Gratitude is manifested in the form of
offerings given to be given to demons or disturbing
beings and to God. As for the devil, the Ibans give
offerings outside the home to avoid disturbances in
gawai.
Gawai or gawa are traditional Dayak tribal
ceremonies including Iban Dayaks. Gawa in the
Iban language dictionary written by D. William,
implicitly means "work". In the dictionary explained
the word worker in the Iban language is pengawa
(Veth, 1856). The same absorption in Indonesian for
the term 'employee' from the basic 'gawai' which
also means 'worker' from the word 'work'. Although
there is one big gawai every year carried out by Iban
people, even in Malaysia it is set on June 1 as a
national gawai day, but gawai is a general term for
various kinds of great work done by Iban people
with similar meanings as a celebration in
understanding that is widely known Indonesian
people. So the term gawai in the Iban community is
done for various ceremonies including ceremonies
for individuals, not just for groups. In the Iban
community, there are various types of gawai,
namely the Penyalang gawai, the Ari Sandau gawai,
the Kelingkang gawai, Gawai Batu, Puncung Tahun
and others. Different program events have special
communal gawai held where each family can hold
them.
According to our informant in Lanjak, pua
kumbu in the past had the function to receive the
head of a human. Usually the head is received with a
special woven cloth, namely pua kumbu with nibung
barayah motif. During their warfare and revenge,
even for traditional rituals, the Iban always practice
recitation. This tradition is also a step towards
maturity for men to prove their courage and heroism
as well as the right time to marry a woman. In the
past, Iban people were once known as tribes that
were feared by other tribes in Kalimantan. This is
because the Iban are considered fond of fighting and
expanding other tribal territories in order to open
new fields and gain access to forest products. Rite
beheading (mengayau) is part of the process which
is considered a threat to other tribes. Based on
searches from oral stories in the 2000s, mengayau
rites were also carried out as a condition of funeral
ceremonies of people who had socially important
positions. For Iban people today, the mengayau rite
is considered a dark history of their parents'
generation which is considered irrelevant in the
contemporary social context. After the Tumbang
Anoi peace agreement took place in 1894, the life of
the Dayak culture, especially the Iban, proceeded
without the practice of headhunting, and it meant
that some ritual and procedures involved in the pua
kumbu had disappeared.
From our observations in the field, the pua
kumbu fabric that used for traditional ceremonies is
coming from an old fabric inherited of weavers'
parents or replicas of an old cloth that is no longer
ICRI 2018 - International Conference Recent Innovation
358
available or because of has been sold for their urgent
needs. Replica of pua kumbu has the same color
patterns as the original fabric, as well as its symbolic
meaning and function. Some pua kumbu only used
during certain events and are not traded with the aim
that their next generation will have original fabric
that can be replicated later. Through pua kumbu, the
Iban people are caring for and preserving their
weaving tradition that has been passed down from
generation to generation.
According to the pre-history of the Megalithic
era, before Dongson culture came to this
archipelago, some artifacts of illustrated stones were
found, and commonly it used three colors, black, red
and white, which considered having a cosmological
meaning. White is a color that is found in almost
every tribe of Indonesia as a symbol of the Dunia
Atas (spiritual color), black is the color of the land
(human earth), and red is the earth of humans as well
as its position as a category of women because white
is the category of men for the Dunia Bawah
(Sumardjo, 2001). The possibility of the old color
layout still hasa connection with the typical color
system of Iban weaving, namely red, black and
white along when it traced from the similarity of the
prehistoric motives that contained in Iban woven
fabrics.
Even so, there are different versions as our
informant said at the Betang Enkadan in Lanjak
which they say that weavers in the past did not use
many colors, limited to only red (brownish red),
black, blue and white. This color selection was due
to limited knowledge of color in possibility. The
informant from the Betang Ngaung Keruh had a
different opinion that the original colors of the Iban
weaving were white, black and red. According to an
informant in Sungai Panjang, the original colors of
Iban are red, yellow, black and white. However, the
informants at Tekalong said that the original Iban
color was red, black and white. The locals' opinion
on the color composition of Iban is not so different
from the information found in Gillow's book entitled
Traditional Indonesian Textiles (1992) which
describes that the traditional colors of Iban weaving
are brownish-red, blue-black and yellow without
further elaborating on the symbolism that each color
carries.
The color of the Iban woven fabric its specific
name in Iban language; black is celum, white is
burak, red is mansau, green is gadung, purple is
belo-belo. For blue and yellow, the Iban call it biru
and kuning the same as its’ Indonesian terms. The
locals also named the colors based on its intensity,
such as; dark red is called mansau tuai, light green is
gadung muda, orange is kuning tuai, reddish purple
is mansau tuai, and turquoise is called biru tuai. For
lighter color the Ibans use the term curak which
means grey, for example, curak mansau, curak
celum and so on.
In choosing the color of woven fabric for the
gawai, the Iban people wear bright colors such as
red and blue in connection with the implementation
of the method he held after receiving a sign of the
descent of the heavenly people. There are no
restrictions on the use of colors, such as in a
Christian ceremony, harvesting celebration, as well
as a baby birth ceremony. But specifically, for the
wedding ceremony, the Ibans wear clothes in bright
colors. Weavers avoid the use of black as a
dominant color because it is believed that it will
make their eyes blind. Unless there is a grieving
ceremony for the deceased Iban, then the sign of
condolence is utilized in the form of a rattan-made
rope that is dyed black then tied to the body.
The ban on using black colorcan be seen in a
ceremony called Gawai Sanawari. This ceremony is
held if there is an Iban who often get nightmares,
then in the next dream, there is a sign that the person
must have gawai. If the signis not obeyed, then the
person will go crazy or die. For the ceremony, the
person who gets the nightmare must offer a pig. In
this ceremony, the pedara is placed on a high
bamboo pole, then the yellow rice made of the
mixture of limestone and lime is thrown away so
that the nightmare becomes tasteless. After that, the
pig is killed and cooked, and to accompany it the
locals will drink tuak. Ibans find out the meaning of
the dream by using gawai the heart of a slaughtered
pig. If the shape of the heart is good or if there is no
injury, the related person will not go crazy or die.
On the other hand, if its liver looks like a wound, it
means a bad sign, then they should make gawai
again in the same manner. Pork meat that has been
cooked is then eaten together with the other
residents of a betang house. When the Iban will kill
the pig, a special weaving called Pua Atap Babi is
issued. This weave is brown-colored with a hint of
black and yellow with geometric plant motifs and is
used for protecting pigs when cut for offerings.
The symbolic meaning of the colors applied to
the Iban woven fabric was seen with a different
perspective by different weavers, as quoted from our
informant at the Betang Ngaung Keruh that people
in the past did not tell them much about the colors of
the woven fabric that they had made. One of the
examples is the red color for sungkit cloth does not
have a specific rule, it is only to extend that red is a
symbol of the courage of the Iban people. While
other weavers said that they have some restrictions
on color, based on messages from their parents
thatthey should not make woven fabric in a black
Weaving for Development: An Ethnographic Study on How the Ibans of West Kalimantan Determines the Color of Pua Kumbu
359
color, but failed to elaborate further about this.
In the process of making natural dyes, some
restrictions must be held by the weavers. People are
not allowed to disturb the process while its ongoing.
One of the rules is the weaver should not be asked
about the color they are working on; it is because the
question will lead the process into failure. The result
of the dying process will not be the same with the
estimation of the weaver. Inability to dye the thread
will also affect the result of the woven fabric.
Meanwhile, from the preparation stage of
weaving on four types of Iban woven fabric
consisting of kebat, pilih, sungkit and sidan, only in
weaving for kebat requires different preparations
with other weaving, namely in the final stage in
designing motives there is the activity of straining or
binding threads according to design motive. Then it
is continued with the coloring stage which contains
the preparation of coloring material, boiling, dyeing,
then tightening once again or embossing, drying, and
opening the thread bond. At present, not all stages of
weaving are carried out. The two initial stages of
spinning yarn and nakar have disappeared and are
no longer carried out by the weavers because there
are no more weavers who can spin the yarn, while
the nakar process is considered impractical and
takes too long.
To bind the yarns in forming motifs before being
dyed with dyes using Lembak leaves. In the present,
they are wearing raffia for practice reason. And
because it is used, the binding of the thread to form a
motif no longer begins with the process of drawing
on the thread but directly binding. The weaving
work is done as part time after farming and doing
housework. The period of work cannot be
ascertained when the completion, for example for a
scarf with a width of 5 cm and a length of 1 meter
takes about 2-3 days. For larger table sizes, it can
take 2-3 months. Iban's women's work is farming,
making baskets, weaving mats, taking care of the
family, and weaving. While men are farming, doing
carpentry work, and making looms. Men cannot
weave and weave because they are considered to
take women's jobs.
Nowadays, Iban weavers also use synthetic
coloring as an alternative to make the product more
attractive. The result of synthetic coloring is more
commercial than the classical one which pays more
attention to the symbolic meaning behind the colors.
Here lies the interesting relationship between the
desire of the Ibans to keep preserving the tradition
and the desire to produce commercial fabrics to meet
economic needs.
4 ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION
Changes in the natural landscape of Kalimantan
occur on a massive scale, entering the mid and late
half of the 20th century. The development of the
logging and mineral mining industry has made
forests cleared and turned them into expanses of
open land. This process was followed by the
expansion of oil palm plantations and various
experiments to open new agricultural land on a large
scale which not only changed the natural landscape
but also encouraged the social changes of the people
who inhabited it. One of the social changes can be
seen from the characteristics of settlements with
long house settlement patterns (betang) that turn into
rural areas with the establishment of individual
houses. Rivers and forests that used to be food
sources and sacred sites no longer provide places to
hunt, live ancestral spirits, game hunt animals,
medicinal plants and important materials such as
rattan, bark, leaves and fruit that are usually used to
make various agricultural, household and handicraft
items including woven fabrics.
Betang in the area of our research area are
inhabited by three generations, namely the
generation of parents, children and grandchildren.
Although the statistical data states the population in
one hamlet or betang reaches tens or hundreds of
lives but the reality is not that much. Usually only
parents and mothers who have children under five.
More adult men go and live abroad to work in the
cities of Malaysia, Puttusibau and Pontianak, while
school-age children to teenagers live in locations
close to schools and campuses. Some teenagers who
occasionally appear in Betang are those who do not
have a job and live while waiting for the opportunity
to come to Bakuli outside. One of the social status of
a person for Iban is measured by the knowledge of
areas far from their place of residence and the
number of social relations that are woven during the
trip. So bajalai and bakuli become important things
for Iban men when they enter the adult stage.
According to Freeman, bajalai is a social
mechanism to replace the mengayau tradition to
improve one's social status.
Almost all family members of the Iban who
settled in Betang ranged from children to the elderly,
involved in field work. Agriculture is very important
for the life of the Iban people, because agriculture is
not only moving the economy but also their socio-
culture. The Iban plant rice for their own
consumption and for the fulfillment of traditional
ICRI 2018 - International Conference Recent Innovation
360
ceremonies and large parties such as gawai.
Weaving activities today are still largely part-time
jobs after doing work in the fields.
In the 1980s, there was a change in the coloring
technique, in which the Ibans began to use synthetic
dye. The consideration was the lower price, the more
natural dyeing techniques, and the capability to
produce a brighter and more intense color, as
opposed to the natural dying method which only has
limited color variation. As in weaving techniques,
the knowledge of Iban weaving dye technique also
inherited from generation to generation by taking
essential ingredients in the surrounding nature, for
example, the red color is obtained from the
processing of roots of Mengkudu Kayu while the
blue coloris taken from the leaves of Rengat Akar.
Iban people called that synthetic dyes as wantex.
However, the use of synthetic dyes has negative
impactson the environment. It caused pollution
which may threaten the perseverance of the nature
around them.
Problems stated above had prompted NGOs to
help the weavers to strive for betterment.It began in
2010 where World Wildlife Fund (WWF)
consistently helped to revive the weaving activities
that had been abandoned by the majority of the
second generation of weavers who were more
focused on education and preferred to do other jobs
thatwere more promising than weaving. One of
NGO’s programs is a natural coloring process that
supports nature conservation. This activity did not
stop at that moment, NGOs also assisted local
people with the procurement of yarn and to market
the product which was the main problems for most
of the weavers. Recently, NGOs namely PRCF and
ASPPUK came to the community in2016 and were
supported by TFCA. The presence these NGOs
besides helping the locals to get the threads also
arousing the enthusiasm of the other Iban women
who previouslywere not interested in weaving. It
was possible as the womenbegan to realize the
economic opportunities that emerged from weaving.
NGOs also often encourage their guests to buy Iban
woven fabrics and create special programs to do
marketing outside the community.
The effort to train Iban weavers to use natural
coloring had pushed the Ibans to return the traditions
handed down from their ancestors. Even though the
current implementation is not one hundred percent
similar to the old techniques, but it utilized the
combined with methods and materials from outside
Kalimantan. For example, the material of Kapur
Sirih, Tawas, and Tunjung brought from Java as one
of the basic ingredients for natural dyes, instead of
using Tempuyung due to physical constraints and
limitations of snails taken in the river as raw
material. For example, when the rainy season
arrives, tempuyung on the banks of the riverbed will
be swept away by fast flowing water so that it will
be easier to find in the dry season where river water
flows more calmly. Tempuyung was also used for
Iban people who were still fond of nyirih not much
different from the function of whiting which is also
used by Javanese to nyirih.
For natural dyes, most of them are taken from
plants in the area around the betang house, like
Rengat Padi leaves that grow near the Betang
Enkadan, every time they picked for coloring the
woven cloth, the weavers will replant the stems to
maintain the availability of natural coloring sources.
Another way is through the planting program of
natural coloring plants in each betang house that
initiated by several NGOs including ASPPUK so
that weavers not only learn to process about coloring
but also get the ease of getting these plants. The
location of planting natural coloring plants varies,
some are chosen close to the betang house where the
weavers are settled or in locations close to their
fields. Most of the weavers choose a location that is
close to the betang house with consideration of the
ease of access to transportation, supervision of plant
maintenance and harvesting of crops whenever
necessary.
The Iban weavers aside from learning to look for
new colors that are in accordance with market
desires, also do not leave the original colors of Iban
whose ingredients are obtained from plants that
grow in the environment of their betang houses. For
example, the weavers in Betang Ngaung Keruh
studied the technique to find new colors from plants
that had not been used by the old-time weavers such
as Kemunting leaves that are growing in the yard of
the Betang Ngaung Keruh. Kemunting is one of the
plants tested and managed to get yellow when mixed
with Tawas and Kapur, then become blue after
fixation with Tunjung ingredients. To get the green
color, the weavers get it by dipping the yarn in
yellow then the same thread is dyed again in blue.
The weavers in Betang Enkadan have been handed
down for generations using Jangau tree bark which
is chopped and pounded as color lockers in the
process of making natural dyes. The other color
locking material is lime (tempuyung) taken from the
edge of the river which is processed by burning the
conch house on a bamboo base until it is destroyed
using firewood until it turns white and becomes
Weaving for Development: An Ethnographic Study on How the Ibans of West Kalimantan Determines the Color of Pua Kumbu
361
powder, then stored in a jar or bottle. The use of this
lime in dyes will produce a brighter color intensity
on the fabric than betel lime. The weavers in
Kampung Sawah also use Jangau to tie natural dyes,
for example the red color produced from the
Mengkudu plant will be better in intensity if tied
with a long way, as well as the black color produced
from the brush or rice whining will be stronger in
color with a strange mixture. Another alternative to
tie colors is to use tempuyung chalk. Plants that are
used for natural dyes can vary in a number of betang
houses, for example in the past, Mengkudu plants
were not found in the area of Kampung Sedik, so for
the red color they used plants and shrubs. After
ASPPUK arrived, then they planted Mengkudu for
natural coloring ingredients.
In its weaving development, there was a third
generation contribution to Iban weaving which their
ideas became a source of inspiration for the creation
of new products design (re-invention) made by their
mothers. Those designs that come from their
children appear to be more modern and functional
according to market tastes. The Ibans started to
produce bags, wallets, pencil cases, cellphones cases
and others that use woven materials. The colors used
not only revolving around the original Iban colors
obtained through the dying of natural dyes namely
red, black, white and blue or variations in other
colors such as green, gray-blueand dark yellow but
also include the colors obtained through threads like
pink, green and purple.
The orientation of market taste for Iban weaving
production has indeed forced some weavers to take
compromise position so that the woven fabric is
quickly formed and has the power to sell by dyeing
colors according to consumer orders. For example,
Malaysian consumers prefer bright colors that
cannot be obtained from natural dyes but from
finished yarns or the process of dyeing synthetic
dyes, while the original Iban weaving colors do not
have bright color intensity but tend to be soft and
dark. As time went on, weaving began to attract the
attention of Iban adult women because weaving was
considered to have economic value. The position of
the weaver begins to shift from weavers who have
the ability to make weaving through customary
conditions to be in the quantity of production and
sales that are able to adjust to market demands. The
weavers who are able to sell large quantities of
woven cloth will receive praise from fellow weavers
which has an impact on the creation of successful
weaving and sales methods for other weavers.
Prestige for weavers is no longer in terms of the
courage to make sacred weaves but also in bringing
in money for children's education and meeting other
living needs.
In fact, Iban weavers cannot be said to be smart
traders and are successful in marketing woven
fabrics from their production because they are new
to making woven fabric as a potential business.
Weavers still seem stuttering towards buyers and
have not met at a balanced point between the quality
of their production and market demands. They
seemed a bit awkward in fixing prices so that it
seemed difficult to compromise in this matter. On
the other hand, the market still seems to be less
appreciative of woven fabric because of minimal
knowledge of the manufacturing process which is
difficult, complicated and requires a long time. The
purchasing power of the market is still limited, so
the economy of the weaving business has not been
able to spin smoothly.
The market taste for Iban weavers have some
dilemmas. Woven fabrics that meet market tastes
will sell faster and automatically bring economic
benefits but the other hand, if the market tastes are
not in the mission of caring for the Iban weaving
tradition, it is feared that it will threaten the
continuity of woven fabrics.
These dynamic have brought changes to Iban
weaving which initially produced as a cultural tool
for the fulfillment of customs, so this orientation
begins to shift into products that have economic
value. For example, pua kumbu is no longer only
used for traditional purposes which have symbolic
meaning, but it becomes products that can be sold
and used by anyone. The motives and colors on the
pua kumbu have undergone a shift in symbolic and
functional values, such as in fashion week events
where the fabrics as pua kumbu are processed into
fashion items, ranging from hats, shoes, bags to
more clothes prioritizing the concept of aesthetics
with high selling power.
The target of consumers is the primary parameter
for the production of Iban woven fabrics in the
present and to determine the composition of colors
which no longer focus solely on the characteristics
of the sacred colors and values of woven fabrics.
Thus, weaving Iban has entered the realm of design
that takes into account the products that have selling
power and competitiveness, but on the other hand, it
is expected to still have traditional characteristics as
a force that makes Iban weaving different from other
local products.
ICRI 2018 - International Conference Recent Innovation
362
5 CONCLUSION
Today, some knowledge about woven fabric
continues to grow, including color, because the Iban
people are open to change itself. Iban weaving is
currently compromising with the market, looking for
the equilibrium of price and quality of products that
are feasible. The balance between fulfilling
economic needs and cultural preservation is the
primary concern of the development of woven
fabrics carried out by related parties ranging from
government to NGOs. Iban weaving today is no
longer seen as a local product that contains
traditional values but also included in design
products that are trying to balance between local
values and commercial value as well as preserve the
traditional characteristics witha blend of modern
style. Thus, Iban weavers with the helping of NGOs
need an adaptation process so that new cultural
problems do not arise while at the same time
maintaining natural sustainability by using natural
dyes.
REFERENCES
Freeman, Derek 1970. Reeport on the lban, London
School of Economics Monographs on Social
Anthropology No. 41. London: The Athlone Press
University of London.
Gavin, Traude. 2003. Iban Ritual Textiles. Leiden: KITLV
Press.
Gillow, John. 1992. Traditional Indonesian Textile
(Limited ed.). London: Thames and Hudson.
Kartiwa, Suwati. 2007. Tenun Ikat. Jakarta: PT. Gramedia
Pustaka Utama.
Sumardjo, Jakob. 2001. Tafsir Gambar-gambar
Prasejarah Indonesia. Jurnal Seni STSI Bandung, 22-
24.
Veth, P.J. 1854. Borneo Bagian Barat, Geografis,
Statistis, Historis. Pontianak: Institut Dayakologi.
Weaving for Development: An Ethnographic Study on How the Ibans of West Kalimantan Determines the Color of Pua Kumbu
363