The Implication of Made-To-Order in the Authenticity of Balinese Handcrafts
Funding period : 2015- Deactivate
Abstrak
The types
of Balinese handicrafts that experience dynamics from the originals as a result
of orders (made-to-order)
and undergo a process of commodification are sculpture crafts consisting of Garuda statue, elephant statue, and giraffe
statue. In addition, there are also mirrors, panels, jewelry,
and paintings
The aspects of Balinese
handicraft that are changing due to the consequences of the order (made-to-order)
are the shape, material, size, and coloring.
Initially, statues such as the Garuda statue as a
decoration of traditional Balinese buildings, as decoration of
bale saka roras, or bale sake
kutus, decoration in temples, and bale gede. Garuda
statue is considered to have philosophical values
so that it was not yet a product to be traded (non-commodity product).
However, since the 1980s, people began actively working and
competing to make various forms of Garuda statues to be
commercialized. Similar things also occur in other types of sculptures, panels, and
jewelry that have changed shape and are mass-produced.
The Garuda statues, the elephant statues,
the giraffe statues, the panels, and
mirrors were originally made of jackfruit wood,
teak wood, champak wood, hibiscus wood,
suar wood, yet currently the materials
of the sculptures, mirrors, and panels are hibiscus
wood, albesia, and plywood or MDF since these
woods are delicate
so they are easy to shape. As for jewelry, Celuk
Village has been well-known for the gold and silver handicraft
industry, but now it has changed. The
jewelry ordered through made-to-order
for mass production is made of brass and alpaca, although
they are still
coated with gold and silver. Furthermore, the
craftsmen also change the technology they used to utilize.
In the beginning,
they used their own hands, and now
a machine with a printing system (casting) is utilized. The
size and coloring for all types of craft arts in this
study underwent changes. The colors that
initially took on natural colors now are replaced
with factory coloring agents
The
Balinese artists make changes or commodification on
craft products as a result of the order (made-to-order)
due to two factors, namely external factors
and internal factors. External factors are caused by made-to-order
orders from consumers that generally follow the market
tastes. In addition, they are caused by the patterns of
production and the influence of tourism. As for internal factors, the craftsmen
in the villages of Kedisan, Ubud, and Celuk, use
their imagination to innovate creatively in order to create
new designs of the sculptures, panels, mirrors, and
jewelry in these three areas. They always
seem to follow the tastes of the market so that their products are liked by the consumers
and are able to produce their products
in bulk. Furthermore, the craftsmen want to change their
socio-economic life and they produce handicrafts as commodities
that are easily sold in the market at low prices.