Far from the madding
crowds, Ubud has long been a quiet haven for the arts. Set
amidst emerald green rice paddies and steep ravines in the
stunning central Balinese foothills, some 25 km north of Denpasar,
the village was originally an important source of medicinal
herbs and plants. "Ubud" in fact derives from the
Balinese word for medicine - ubad.
It was here that foreign
artists such as Walter Spies settled during the 1920s and
'30s, transforming the village into a flourishing center for
the arts. Artists from all parts of Bali were invited to settle
here by the local prince, Cokorda Gede Sukawati, and Ubud's
palaces and temples are now adorned by the work of Bali's
master artisans as a result. Unfortunately, the tourist boom
has transformed Ubud into a bustling business center, complete
with traffic jams and fast food outlets.
According to an 8th century
legend, a Javanese priest named Rsi Markendya came to Bali
from Java and meditated in Campuan (Sangam in Sanskrit) at
the confluence of two streams - an auspicious site for Hindus.
He founded the Gunung Lebah Temple here, on a narrow platform
above the valley floor, where pilgrims seeking peace came
to be healed from their worldly cares. You can get there by
following a small road to the Tjetjak Inn on the western outskirts
of Ubud, then taking the path down toward the river.
Important 19th century
court
In the late 19th century,
Ubud became the seat of punggawa or feudal lords owing their
allegiance to the raja of Gianyar. All were members of the
satriya family of Sukawati and contributed greatly to the
village's fame for the performing and plastic arts. The kingdom
of Gianyar was established in the late 18th century and later
became the most powerful of the southern states of Bali. And
while elsewhere the Dutch conquest had such disastrous consequences
for the Balinese royal houses, in Gianyar for the most part
the raja and his subjects benefited from a Dutch administration
that brought improved road irrigation networks, health care
and school The period between 1908 and 1930 indeed, brought
significant changes to the area, and toward the end of the
1930s Ubud was prospering as a budding tourist resort due
to flowering of the arts here.
In the late 19th century
a certain Cokorda Sukawati established himself in Ubud and
was instrumental in laying the foundations for the village's
fame. The area was at this time bereft of remarkable cultural
features. It was it, the interest of the Cokorda that various
artists and literati sought refuge here from other kingdoms.
Ubud slowly accumulated specialists and evolved into a cultural
center with resident artists and lontar experts.
A prime example is the
case of the young I Gusti Nyoman Lempad who, with his father,
a noted literati, sought and found refuge in Ubud from the
king of Bedulu. In gratitude, the young apprentice sculptor
helped to decorate the main Puri Saren palace in Ubud and
carved statues and ornaments on the main temple (Pura Puseh)
of the noble family, north of the palace. He also carved the
temple of learning (Pura Saraswati). His work is still to
be seen on location and some of his statues can be admired
in Ubud's museum. At an advanced age he turned to pen and
ink, working right up until his death in 1978 at the age of
116.
A flowering of the
arts
The punggawa of Ubud
between the World Wars, Cokorda Gede Raka Sukawati, was a
member of the Dutch Colonial Government's Volksraad (People's
Council) in Batavia and already interested in the "arts
and crafts movement" spreading from Europe to Asia and
Japan. He encouraged Walter Spies to settle in Ubud, thus
provoking a growing tide of visitors to this enchanting village.
At the turn of the century,
painting in Bali was integrated in religious or adat ceremonies
with the themes being taken from classical Balinese tales
that were well-known from wayang performances. Inspired by
the foreign artists who settled in Ubud, Cokorda Gede Raka
Sukawati gradually changed this tradition. The unique m6lange
of traditional Balinese and modern currents of western art
forms that came to be associated with Ubud then took place.
In the late 1920s and
early 1930s Ubud became the focal point for foreign artists
and other creative people gathering around Spies, a highly
gifted and versatile German artist. A Painter and a musician
by training, Spies heard of Bali on reading Jaap Kunst's Music
of Bali, published in 1925, in which the Dutch musicologist
praised neighboring Peliatan highly for its gamelan orchestra.
His work and anecdotes on the island riveted the attention
of Spies, who was then director of the sultan of Yogyakarta's
European orchestra.
Many other talented foreigners
were attracted to Ubud also at this time. Among others, Miguel
and Rosa Covarrubias popularized the hitherto little known
beauty of Bali upon viewing Gregor Krause's magnificent photo
album, published in 1925. Krause had worked as a doctor in
Bali around 1912. After living in Ubud and Sanur, Covarrubias
wrote his Island of Bali, one of the classics on Bali to this
day. Rudolf Bonnet, the Dutch painter, was told of Bali's
breathtaking beauty by the etcher and ethnographer Nieuwenkamp
in Florence and came here to seek inspiration in the late
1920s. Colin McPhee came to join Spies' experiments and stocktaking
of musical traditions, which were at this time very dynamic,
with new creations springing up overnight. They worked together
with the legendary Anak Agung Gede Mandera of Peliatan. McPhee
later published a book on Bali's musical traditions as well
as an account of his experiences here, A House in Bali.
Ubud rapidly became the
village "en vogue" for many of these visitors -
an insider tip from the many musicians, painters, authors,
anthropologists and avant-garde world travelers who passed
this way, especially after Spies settled in Campuan next to
Ubud, on what is now the site of the Hotel Tjampuhan.
Spies and Bonnet both
encouraged local Balinese artists, each in his own fashion.
In 1936 they founded the Pita Maha, an artists' organization,
together with Lempad, Sobrat and I Tegalan, among many other
excellent Balinese artists. This association was to guarantee
and promote the high artistic standards of its more than 100
members.
Ubud since independence
The Pita Maha movement
did survive the vagaries of the Japanese occupation and the
Indonesian struggle for Independence. However, Cokorda Gede
Agung Sukawati, assisted by Bonnet, later founded the Palace
of Arts Museum (Puri Lukisan Museum) in 1953 to provide a
retrospective of local achievements. Balinese artists thus
continued to work together, sparking a renewal of artistic
activity in the 1950s.
In the early 1950s, Dutch
painter Arie Smit founded the Young Painters School of naive
painting in Penestanan with Cakra. This style, free of any
philosophical or abstract influence, led to relatively uninhibited
young school children using bright chemical colors to produce
two-dimensional landscapes depicting daily life. Their work
reflects the changing vision and lifestyle of young Balinese
during the post-war period.
Han Snel was a young
Dutch soldier who left the Dutch Colonial Army and 'vanished'
into Bali after his military service. He then found his way
up to the hills around Ubud. His work captured the imagination
of both foreigners and Balinese alike with its invigorating
synthesis of both cultures. Following his marriage to Siti,
he built a studio in a secluded spot in Central Ubud. Antonio
Blanco, another Western painter, settled with
his Balinese wife and
five children on the heights of Campuan, bordering Penestanan.
This eccentric even had one of Ubud's first telephones, a
link between paradise and the madding crowds abroad.
The tourist boom
In
the 1960s and 1970s the hotel and catering industry implanted
itself here modestly enough compared to how it had taken firm
control of Kuta-Legian, but this idyllic village did nevertheless
witness an ever-accelerating flow of visitors who came to
delight in the arts and to escape from the daily grind. In
short, tourism knocked gently but insisting on Ubud's door.
The advent of mass tourism in the 1980s has provided many
young inhabitants of this village with stable employment rather
than farming the fertile rice field in the surrounding hills.
Land reform and hereditary laws, in any case, have led to
scarcity of arable land.
It is therefore with
mixed feelings that the visitor will notice how "business-like"
the Ubudians are, although their artistic talents are still
being cultivated. But modern time bring progress which is
not to be stopped in the name of nostalgia. The inhabitants
of Ubud retain their individuality and generosity, of spirit
through all the changes, which leave the visitor wondering
how this charming people can manage to deal with the dizzying
alterations in the village structure resulting from the modernization
of social, economic, and perhaps occasionally spiritual facto
This must be one of the world's most closely guarded secrets,
or perhaps it is only that special peace of mind which comes
from such a beautiful environment and a mild climate. The
unruffled calmness of Ubud has soothed many a visitor, while
the extraordinary beauty of the surroundings still inspire
the creative to work.
Nowadays you are also
able to enjoy the fruits of that extraordinarily prolific
period of pre-World War II Ubud in dance, music, painting
and sculpture. Dance performance are given daily in at least
three places including the main palace. In the meanwhile,
ceremonies still abound where you can see various dance or
shadow puppet performance or listen to excellent gamelan music.
Pain and sculptors, writers and creative designers continue
to seek abiding inspiration in the quiet stylishness of Ubud,
Campuan and nearby Sayan. Gracious Ubud is certainly worth
a visit.
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