| The
backbone of Balinese culture is dance, which is performed during
temple festivals and in ceremonies of the cycle of life and death.
What is performed in hotels and restaurants for tourists is only
a small fraction of what Balinese dance has to offer.
From the time that Balinese history was being recorded in written
form, its dance has existed. Ninth century inscriptions named the
wayang (puppet theatre) and topeng (mask dance) as the main entertainment
of the day. Gamelan music goes back still further to the Dong Son
bronze culture of the first millennium BC. Apart from the trance
dances, much of the Balinese dance heritage actually originates
from Java.
History of Balinese Dance
After the Majapahit warriors subdued Bali in the 14th century, Javanese
mini-principalities and courts soon appeared everywhere, creating
that unique blend of court and peasant culture, which is Bali -
highly sophisticated, dynamic and lively. The accompanying narrative
for dance and drama is to a large extent based on court stories
from pre-Majapahit Java. Even the Indian epics, another favorite
of the stage, especially the wayang, use Javanese, complete with
long quotes from the ancient Javanese Kakawin poetry So Javanese
culture, which disappeared from Java following Islamization in the
l6th century, still survived in Bali in a "Balinese form",
which became classical Balinese culture.
However, colonization brought about the fall of classical Bali.
With the rural courts defeated and with new lords of the land, the
centre of creativity shifted to village associations, and to the
development of tourism. The 30's and 50's were particularly fertile
decades; while the old narrative led theater survived, lively solo
dances appeared everywhere, accompanied by a new, dynamic kind of
music called gong kebyar. This trend continued in the 60's and 70's
with the creation of colossal sendratari ballets, representing ancient
Indian and Javanese stories adapted to the needs of modern audiences.
Dance & Religion
Balinese dance is inseparable from religion. A small offering of
food and flowers must precede even dances for tourists. Before performing,
many dancers pray at their family shrines, appealing for holy "taksu"
(inspiration) from the gods.
In this rural tradition, the people say that peace and harmony depend
on protection by the gods and ancestors. Dance in this context may
fulfill a number of specific functions:
a) as a channel for visiting gods or demonic gods, the dancers acting
as a sort of living repository. These trance dances include the
Sang Hyang Dedari, with little girls in trance, and the Sang Hyang
Jaran, a fire dance;
b) as a welcome for visiting gods, such as the pendet, rejang and
sutri dances;
c) as entertainment for visiting gods, such as the topeng and the
wayang.
In some of these dances, the role of dancing is so important that
it is actually the key to any meaning to be found in the ritual.
In wayang performances, the puppeteer is often seen as the "priest"
sanctifying the holy water.
As well as their use in religious ceremonies, dance and drama also
have a strong religious content. It is often said that drama is
the preferred medium through which the Balinese cultural tradition
is transmitted. The episodes performed are usually related to the
rites taking place; during a wedding one performs a wedding story;
at a death ritual there is a visit to "hell" by the heroes.
Clowns (penasar) comment in Balinese, peppering their jokes with
religious and moral comments on stories whose narratives use Kawi
(Old-Javanese).
The typical posture in Balinese dance has the legs half bent, the
torso shifted to one side with the elbow heightened and then lowered
in a gesture that displays the suppleness of the hands and fingers.
The torso is shifted in symmetry with the arms. If the arms are
to the right, the shifting is to the left, and vice-versa.
Apart from their costumes, male and female roles can be identified
mostly by the accentuation of these movements. The women's legs
are bent and huddled together, the feet open, so as to reveal a
sensual arching of the back. The men's legs are arched and their
shoulders pulled up, with more marked gestures, giving the impression
of power.
Dance movements follow on from each other in a continuum of gestures
with no break and no jumping (except for a few demonic or animal
characters).
Each basic posture (agem), such as the opening of the curtain or
the holding of the cloth, evolves into another agem through a succession
of secondary gestures or tandang. The progression from one series
to the other, and the change from right to left and vice-versa,
is marked by a short jerky emphasis called the angsel. The expression
is completed by mimicry of the face: the tangkep. Even the eyes
dance, as can be seen in the baris and trunajaya dances.
The Dances of Bali
Kecak Dance
"Cak-cak-cak."
The obsessive sound of a choir from beyond the dust of ages suddenly
rises between the lofty trees. Darkness looms over the stage.
Hundreds of bare-breasted men sit in a circle around the flickering
light of an oil lamp chandelier. "Cak-Cak". They start
dancing to the rhythmic sound of their own voices, their hands raised
to the sky and bodies shaking in unison. This is the unique Kecak,
perhaps the most popular of all Balinese dances.
Visitors rarely leave the island of Bali without first seeing a
Kecak performance. Originally the Kecak was just an element of the
older Sang Hyang trance dance. It consisted of a male choir praying
obsessively to the souls of their ancestors. At the initiative of
painter Walter Spies, this religious choir was transformed into
a dance by providing it with a narrative. The ballet is the Ramayana
epic. The prince Rama, his wife Sita and his brother Laksmana are
exiled in the middle of the forest. Rama goes hunting a golden deer
at the request of his wife, who saw the strange animal and has asked
him to catch it. While he is away, she is kidnapped by Rahwana and
taken to the latter's island kingdom of Alengka (Srilangka).
Rama allies himself with the monkeys and in particular with the
white monkey Hanuman. They build a bridge and cross to the island.
War ensues until finally Rama defeats Rahwana and is again united
with his faithful wife. |