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Category Archives: Ubud

Blatant endorsement

Those of you who recall our adventures in Luang Prabang may recall my personal misadventures in hair removal. For those who are interested in such things, I can happily report that Ubud is a very different story, and I am overdue in letting you know.

Fresh Spa on JL Dewi Sita, which promises treatments so good you can eat them, has “caramel waxing.” This means sugaring, in which hair is removed with a warm taffy like sugar and water mixture, rather than hot wax. Because business was slow, I had two ladies working on me – don’t expect this, it was a totally a low season perk. But you can expect an awesome service. It was the most painless hair removal I have ever had. Seriously, it did not hurt, not even the bikini sugar. After the sugaring, they carefully removed stray hairs with a tweezer, quickly, and i was a smooth and happy soon-to-be beach bum. And I got to watch a gecko while it was going on. It was a good price too. Very very happy.

– The Private Eye

 

The value of good people in Ubud

I will admit that for a couple of days, I actively disliked Ubud.

How can this be, you might wonder? This is, after all, a city where art reigns supreme, where mask-carver, batik-maker and painter are viable day jobs. Further, this is the city of love in Eat, Pray, Love. But I didn’t love it to start, though i came to like it very much, and I hope the reasons why may be of use to other travelers.

First: my greatest regret about our preparations for this trip is that neither of us learned to ride a scooter. Despite the fact that one of our dear friends is nothing less than the Scooter-Preneur of San Francisco, and another of our dear friends owns and rides a scooter, in our presence, all the time — we just never learned. In Asia, we soon came to understand, this is the equivalent of deciding not to learn to drive a car in America. You can do fine in major cities, but in the country or in a place without strong transit infrastructure, like Bali, you will be hiring a car and driver, which was a largely unexpected and unwelcome expense. Self-driving car rental here is thin on the ground. Locals tell you about all the tourists who die every year learning to ride scooters here. Fellow travelers who didn’t heed the warning invariably show you some scrape or another from a more minor accident.

This being the case, we decided to base ourselves in the center of Ubud, so we could walk quickly to many of the main attractions, rather than basing ourselves in some blissed-out rice paddy twenty minutes by foot from town proper. This turned out to be a fine decision for many practical reasons, and I really liked our guesthouse, but the center of Ubud is now well and truly touristed. Picture being at Pier 39, but every shop is filled with interesting things, and has a kind-looking woman out front urging you to buy. Every street corner has a man asking if you if you want taxi, transport. It’s great for shopping, but a bit overwhelming for me – I tend to notice everything, and everyone, and feel drawn to connect based on very minimal contact. This is a great quality for my work, but a lousy one for navigating a new bazaar in a new country where I feel unsure of myself. Point being, our particular location meant that we could not walk anywhere without being subject to 10 minutes or more of this.

Add to this the 90+ degree heat and humidity that turns my face into a 12 hour wellspring of sweat every day, and I was having trouble enjoying all that is amazing about this place.

But what a difference a new friend makes! The day after we met the Art Teacher (the expat from Canada who lives in Turkey and was here on vacation), we did not see her. She was doing her batik class, and we were making our rings, which I loved as it was both quiet and fully engrossing. Afterwards I had a tougher time enjoying myself, though The Professor and I did a nice sunset walk on the Campuan Ridge (rice paddies, towering pastel cloud views, charming local teens smoking and flirting in quiet corners of a thatch-field atop the ridge), and saw the Kecak and Fire Dance.

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Both are very worth seeing, by the way. The former features a cast of shirtless men who chant monkey-like chitterings as the only musical accompaniment to a drama of a portion of the Ramayana; the section stars Hanuman the monkey king, of course. The latter features a man, supposedly entranced, who is “riding” a hobby-horse over a bed of hot coconut husk coals barefoot, each charge of knight and steed resulting in a beautiful and shocking shower of embers directly at somebody’s face, but never touching them. Attendants swept the coals back into a pile after each pass, until the man astride the magic gallops through them again. Eventually he collapses from exertion and is revived by the priest. I know this is an old ritual tarted up for tourists, but it remains powerful.

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And yet despite the wonder I remained discontent! But that all changed the next day when we met up with the Art Teacher at the Threads of Life textile center for a lecture. It’s a worthy organization with an approach both practical and academic to preserving Indonesian weaving traditions throughout the archipelago. And the Art Teacher was so enthusiastic and knowledgable about it, and about Bali/Ubud in general. She is very smart, and tells good stories, and it was a pleasure to talk with her. Suddenly, I could appreciate the quiet lanes off the main roads more, and feel a bit less affected by the pleading on the busier streets.

The lecture was followed by a lunch of delicious suckling pig in a nearby warung, where we relaxed despite future daily specials squealing on a balcony one floor below us. Then, following the clue that our laundress had been all dressed up that morning, we went to the temple of the dead. We missed the ritual, but enjoyed seeing the architecture and banyan trees, and just sat around on a shady platform talking. Then we got the bright idea to go to the Setia Darma Museum of Masks and Puppets in the village of Mas, which was exceptional – and was another great place to sit and talk when we weren’t appreciating remarkable art.

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When we got back, we separated near the Art Teacher’s part of town, which is still busy but less frantic, near the Monkey Forest. We parted, and the Professor and I decided to find the studio of the artists we had met in the gallery on Hanuman Street. It turned out that the studio lay directly behind the sacred monkey forest, and that there is a “bike path” (scooter route) that leads there which follows the exterior fence of the forest. We saw plenty of monkeys on our walk, including a baby monkey that was so tiny, it had trouble managing its rambutan fruit.And we didn’t have to pay to go into the forest! And here are full-grown ones:

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Behind the forest, past a woodcarver’s house, lay the studio. It was open walled, cement floored and tin roofed, and the artist I had spoken with for a long time at the gallery was the only one at home. There were stacks and stacks of paintings in racks along the edge of the space, and suitable seating for such a place, such as old car seats and a large sculptural high chair, and some cheap plastic stools near a home-made table. The artist welcomed us, and we shared our mangosteens, and talked until the sun set about Indonesia and America and his art and the yoga-people who come to Bali — both the good and the over-the-top ridiculous: “yoga blah blah blah”. Also hilarious: his explanations about why Balinese men get a lot of action from female tourists, though our host did not relate that he had had any such adventures. I admire a man with discretion.

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We bid him farewell and had a nice duck dinner, and then went to bed. On the next day, the Art Teacher, the Professor and I walked to Goa Gajah, a cave whose opening is carved in a monstrous face. We then went to Gunung Kawi, a site of old ruins in niches of a rock face. We retired to our homestay for the heat of the day, where I spent my time learning Bahasa Indonesian words from our host’s children, while teaching them English words for things. It was fun; I also tried to teach the oldest tic-tac-toe, but I fear I am a poor teacher and we turned it into a counting game.

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Later, we went back to the palace and enjoyed a much more exciting Legong dance than our first one, the dancers seemed much more passionate. We also saw the Barong dance, in which a large, shaggy embodiment of good does some onstage comedy with a monkey, and later fights a demon. Predictably, I love the Barong. So do children everywhere!

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It was a great performance.

Today, we head on to Amed on the east coast to dive the wreck of the USS Liberty. I am looking forward to less humid weather, but I have come to appreciate Ubud more, thanks to our hosts, their children, the artist and the Art Teacher. It is amazing how much kindness and conversation can turn your whole view around.

– The Private Eye

 

Shadow Puppets and Silversmithing

There’s a long list of artistic and cultural places we want to go and things we want to do here in Ubud: art classes, dance performances, museums, and more. The Private Eye has, since her making a large parade-style puppet last year, been very interested in puppetry. Shadow puppetry is an art form here, called Wayang Kulit, so we made Sunday night’s venture to go to a show. There was a simple sheet, with a torch behind it. You could see where, over decades, the torch has sooted the ceiling black and eroded the plaster a bit. The puppetmaster was 80 years old, and had several assistants. The show we saw told the story of the Sacrifice of Bima, where Bima offers himself as a sacrifice to a demon to appease it and save a kingdom, then defeats it in battle.

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We met an expat art teacher (from British Columbia, now teaches in Turkey) who comes to Bali every few years to learn some new arts. We chatted for a bit and might meet up tomorrow for a walk around the city.

On Monday, 2/4, we woke up and made our way to the small private library that is seemingly becoming our base of operations. We’d scheduled a silversmithing class for 10AM: 3 hours cost R200k/person ($25), including up to 3 grams of silver, you pay for the extra silver if you want to use more. After a bit of discussion, we decided to make rings, similar in shape (both ringed bands with designs within), but different in style. Our teacher, Anna, has been a silversmith all her life, and her entire family are silversmiths.

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First, you decide how big a ring, and cut a piece of silver (92.5% silver, 7.5% copper) plate of the right width and length. You then solder (with silver solder) the two ends together, and shape it into a circle. You then add the wires that form the rings on the edges of the band, and solder them on. At this point, you have two simple silver rings, and you need to add the decoration.

I chose a design that I’d never seen before, but in my typical style is much easier to do than it looks. You take a thin piece of silver plate and crinkle it up, heat it, and crinkle it up again. You cut the plate to the right length and width to fit between the rings, and solder it in.

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The Private Eye chose a beaded design with curls. To do this design, you take thin silver wire and bend it into the desired curls, then glue them to the face of the ring. Using tiny bits of glue, you then affix tiny silver beads; she also affixed some small disks.

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You then dab some solder around the pieces and heat the ring, replacing the glue with metal. To heat the rings, Anna had a foot pumped propane torch. Very simple, but it works!

After the rings have cooled, you polish them, inside and out. We used an oxidizing solution to darken recessions in our designs, then polished again to make the raised regions shiny. Two hours later, we had silver rings made by our own hands.

We are trying to keep to a R500k/day ($60) budget, which would be easy except for all of these artistic ventures. To attend a Kecak dance tonight we’re going to cheat and borrow from tomorrow’s finances. Food isn’t too hard — you can get a tasty meal of noodls or fried rice with vegetables for R15k. Of course there are also super-fancy places here with R60k desserts, but we’d rather spend our money on art and save for diving and other adventures.

We haven’t quite figured out our schedule yet. It turns out that Life is Too Short (whom we met in Luang Prabang) has been distracted by Myanmar, so might not make it to Bali until the 16th. We definitely have a few more days in Ubud, but don’t know how many. I don’t know if we are going to try Kuta (the Bali foreigner party city) at all, or just avoid its western stuff and skip directly to Gili Air.

(this post is a bit brief and choppy because I’m trying to finish it quickly before The Private Eye returns from the spa!)

— The Professor

 

Ubud and Art

Well before we arrived in Ubud, we were struck by the immediacy of Balinese art. The goggle-eyed faces peering out at us around Denpasar evoked both fear and laughter, as though every face was a laughing face lit by firelight from below. Scary. Funny. Somehow part of some full-bellied, cosmic joke. Even the sculptural decoration of columns and walls seemed so aggressively three-dimensional as to be extra-dimensional.

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So when we saw a dance performance at the palace last night, all that imagery came to life for us. The Professor and I disagreed about the performance quality – I found it solid but not brilliant, in part due to a lackluster audience; he found some of the performers amazing – we did not disagree about the strong performances among the troupe and the transfixing nature of the dance period.

The evening featured an assortment of traditional dances. I liked the Kebyar Dudak, which “depicts the infancy and adolescence in the life of a young prince”, which featured a young, heavily made-up man with very sharp and precise movements, as well as a confident sneer and a great eye roll.

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I also enjoyed the Topeng Keras mask dance, which featured a tough, red-faced man who moved like a video game villain from a late-80s Nintendo game, all sideways menace and sudden movements after periods of quiet.

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Like gymnastics, this dance performance mostly featured mature men and tiny little girls. The girls did a butterfly dance that I quite liked, but I couldn’t get into the more traditional Legong dance. I did like the Puspa Wresti dance, which was performed by women and led by a woman in her 30s or 40s who had the most astonishing facial expressions. I don’t know if her eyelids ever touched her irises, she was that wide-eyed.

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Afterwards, we went out on the town looking for action, which is apparently hard to come by in Ubud. At my insistence, we went to a jazz bar for dessert, but got there just as the band was packing up, and soon realized that the place was full of other couples, most of whom seemed older than us by a good deal, which was not important, but all of whom seemed uninterested in meeting new people, which was an issue.

We left and started walking down the street, and passed by an art gallery in which six or eight 20-something longhairs guys were sitting around a low table, drinking beer and smoking clove cigarettes. One of them called out, “hey, come in!” and after a quick huddle the Professor and I did so.

I’ll confess now – I smoked a few cloves with the guys, breaking my new year’s resolution for an evening. Two of the guys were the gallery’s artists, and their art wasn’t like anything around, not Balinese-iana at all. It featured scary/funny faces (that thing again), girls, text, objects from a bar, local dogs, and pure abstraction. Vigorous young-man stuff. One of them explained to me that he grew up in Sumatra, and had studied art in Jakarta, but had come to Ubud because artists can make a living here, even artists who don’t make the stuff tourists expect to buy.

Not that things weren’t thin for them as they are for young artists everywhere. One guy, an artist and a former boxer who dropped fighting after being put in a coma, explained that he grows his hair into long dreadlocks to sell once they reach a certain length.

We talked about living far away from home, the phenomenon of short hair on women and long hair on men, politics, economics and art. They shared their beer with the Professor.

So today, after touring a big and gorgeous museum, we bought them a big beer in return, and they invited us to come see their studio. We might see it tomorrow, after taking a silver-smithing class or touring the ARMA museum and the monkey forest.

– The Private Eye