TY - JOUR
T1 - Unsur[e] Kaligrafi: On Aceh, Islamic Art, and the Terrain of Indonesian Multiculturalism
AU - George, Ken
PY - 2004
Y1 - 2004
N2 - The hybrid discourse of Indonesian Islamic aesthetics, and in particular, a painterly metalanguage that draws from Indonesian, Arabic, English, Dutch, and dozens of regional languages such as Acehnese and Javanesefraught with ironies, puns, blasphemies, unruly codeswitchings, and conflicts over standardscomes down to us through an unsettled history of cultural encounter. I say unsettled in that the history of cultural and political claims regarding Arab and Quranic orthography, language, and philology remains an ongoing and contested resource within Indonesias diverse Muslim community. Anxieties consumed A.D. Pirous and his imagined public on the eve of his major retrospective show at Jakartas prestigious Galeri Nasional. They had to do with some unsure calligraphy and culminated in acts of self-censorship, gestures that are necessarily part of the complex cultural politics that shape the confluence of Islam, Indonesia, Aceh, Arab and art in Jakartas contemporary Muslim art public. In them we may find lessons not only about the globalized reach of Islamic visual culture and but also about prospects for a multicultural Indonesian state. In particular, Ill emphasize some of the constraints religion and nation bring to bear on a multicultural public, and call attention to the cultural politics of ambiguity in a multicultural art public.
AB - The hybrid discourse of Indonesian Islamic aesthetics, and in particular, a painterly metalanguage that draws from Indonesian, Arabic, English, Dutch, and dozens of regional languages such as Acehnese and Javanesefraught with ironies, puns, blasphemies, unruly codeswitchings, and conflicts over standardscomes down to us through an unsettled history of cultural encounter. I say unsettled in that the history of cultural and political claims regarding Arab and Quranic orthography, language, and philology remains an ongoing and contested resource within Indonesias diverse Muslim community. Anxieties consumed A.D. Pirous and his imagined public on the eve of his major retrospective show at Jakartas prestigious Galeri Nasional. They had to do with some unsure calligraphy and culminated in acts of self-censorship, gestures that are necessarily part of the complex cultural politics that shape the confluence of Islam, Indonesia, Aceh, Arab and art in Jakartas contemporary Muslim art public. In them we may find lessons not only about the globalized reach of Islamic visual culture and but also about prospects for a multicultural Indonesian state. In particular, Ill emphasize some of the constraints religion and nation bring to bear on a multicultural public, and call attention to the cultural politics of ambiguity in a multicultural art public.
U2 - index.php/jai/article/view/3515/2791
DO - index.php/jai/article/view/3515/2791
M3 - Article
VL - 75
SP - 15
EP - 21
JO - Antropologi Indonesia
JF - Antropologi Indonesia
ER -