Lower garment (kain panjang)
Place of Originperhaps the north coast of Java, Indonesia
Date1875-1925
MaterialsCotton and dyes
DimensionsH. 42 in x W. 70 in, H. 106.7 cm x W. 177.8 cm
Credit LineGift of Dr. Stephen A. Sherwin and Merrill Randol Sherwin
Object number2010.354
DepartmentSoutheast Asian Art
ClassificationsTextiles
On View
Not on viewThe advancing soldiers depicted on this garment may represent the conquering forces of the Lombok expedition, an 1864 battle that secured the island of Lombok as a Dutch colony. In Java in the early 1900s designs depicting emblems of colonial power became popular among Europeans and their families. Some scholars believe that textiles such as these, referred to as kain kompeni or cloths of the “company” (the Dutch East Indies trading company), were worn primarily by Dutch colonial families and their associates. But in this photo from the early 1900s, a young Indonesian tea plantation worker wears a garment nearly identical to the one on display. This photographic evidence shows that many of the assumptions made about who might wear certain garments are not always true; the trade of batik spread textiles across the archipelago.
approx. 1905
1875-1900
1900-1925
1970 or earlier
approx. 1875-1925
early 1900s
approx. 1920
approx. 1920