For over a thousand years
Batuan has been a village of artists and craftsmen, old legends
and mysterious tales. Batuan's recorded history begins in
A-D. 1022, with an inscription that is housed in the main
village temple, Pura Desa Batuan. The name "Batuan"
or "Baturan" mentioned here prompts villagers to
joke about being "tough as stone" or "eating
rocks" - as batu means "stone" in Balinese.
But it likely refers to an ancient megalithic tradition in
which standing stones served as meeting places and ceremonial
sites for the worship of ancestral spirits.
Famous families
Batuan's central location
in south Bali is the primary reason for its historical importance.
Besides the ancient village temple, there is a temple called
Pura Gede Mecaling which is said to be on the site of the
old palace of the demon king Jero Gede Mecaling, whose name
the Balinese are afraid to even utter. He is supposed to have
moved from here to the island of Nusa Penida, where he still
reside.
In the 1600s the famous
family of Gusti Ngurah Batulepang dominated south Bali, living
as prime ministers based in Batuan. They remained prime ministers
until the early 1700s, when a branch of the Klungkung royal
family was established at nearby Sukawati. At that time the
chief centers of the kingdom were Sukawati, Batuan, and the
nearby sea side village of Ketewel. Batuan still has ritual
links with Ketewel that commemorate that era.
The family of Batulepang
scattered to the far corners of Bali in subsequent centuries
as the result of a priestly curse, but a small temple for
Gusti Batulepang remains on the site of his palace. The Buddhist
priests or pedanda boda who later made Batuan a great spiritual
center built a house, the Griya Ageng on that part of Batulepang's
temple where death rituals were once held. They then marshaled
powerful Tantric forces here.
Brahman majority
Because Batuan became
a center from which Buddhist priests and brahmans spread to
main court centers of south Bali, the village has an unusual
preponderance of brahmans DeZoete and Spies, in their famous
book Dance and Drama in Bali, describe it almost as entirely
a brahman village. This is not really true, but much of the
village near the main Denpasar to Ubud road is inhabited by
the extended family of the Buddhist Griya Ageng and of a smaller
number of Siwa-worshipping brahmans who came later to Batuan.
The other main high caste family the Dewas, related to the
Batua, or extended palace family, who are in turn closely
related to the Gianyar royal family. Batuan is unusual in
that commoners actually form a minority in the center of the
village.
The western area of Batuan,
known Negara, was a separate village and court center in the
19th century. It grew so powerful that it revolted against
the main house Gianyar in 1884, destroying the kingdom and
setting south Bali on a path of inter conflict which opened
it up to Dutch conquest. In 1900, when the Dutch took over
Gianyar, Negara was incorporated within Batuan Similarly,
the adjacent area of Puaya, a famous center for dance and
theater ornaments, puppets and other objects made from hide,
is regarded as being quite separate.
Dancing ancient tales
The Buddhist brahmans
of Batuan, in concert with the famous former king of the village,
Anak Agung Gede Oka (1860 - 1947), were responsible for making
Batuan the center on Bali for the most courtly and elegant
of all Balinese dance forms, the gambuh. In all of Bali only
two troupes from Batuan still perform this theatrical presentation
of tales of ancient princes and princesses.
The first is led by I
Made Jimat, Bali's most celebrated dancer of modern times,
whose genius never fails to leave his audiences breathless.
The second consists of the extended family of the greatest
dancer of the generation before Jimat - the late I Nyoman
Kakul - who passed on the skills and techniques of gambuh
and of the other important dance forms such as the masked
topeng plays and the operatic arja theater. I Ketut Kantor,
Kakul's son, now leads the troupe.
In his day Kakul was
able to call on the mask-making skills of Dewa Putu Kebes,
whose topeng masks were charged with the spiritual forces
of kings and heroes from the Balinese past. Since his death,
his son Dewa Cita and grandson Dewa Mandra have maintained
the combination of immaculate skill and divine inspiration,
which made his work so powerful. A pupil of the family, Made
Regug of Negara, also upholds the fine carving tradition.
Besides the dances, performed
in the central part of the village, Batuan is also famous
for its wayang wong, masked performances of stories from the
Ramayana. This is exclusively performed in the banjar (hamlet)
known as Den Tiis.
The 'Batuan style'
From Den Tiis also came
the inspiration for the modern Batuan style of painting. In
the 1930s, two brothers, I Ngendon and I Patera, began experimenting
painting with ink on paper. The result was powerful black
and white images of magic and of Balinese life. The families
of these two artists are still influential in the village,
and now own the Art shop Dewata on the main road leading to
Ubud.
Ngendon and Patra originally
studied under a traditional painter living to the east of
the palace, but from them. The painting tradition spread back
to the main part of the village where it was enthusiastically
embraced by a number of their fellow villagers. The present-day
generation of artists includes Made Tubuh, Wayan Rajin, Ida
Bagus Putu Gede and Made Budi who has become famous through
his humorous and insightful depictions of tourists in Bali.
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