Ikat Textiles of Timor
Peter Ten Hoopen(Author)
University Museum and Art Gallery (Publisher)
Published on 7. January 2026
Book
Hardback
288 pages
978-988-74710-5-9 (ISBN)
Description
Ikat Textiles of Timor offers an in-depth overview of regional textile styles from both West and East Timor, while also contributing significant new insights into their design traditions. In academic literature, the ikated men's wraps from Timor have long been described as symmetrical. However, Dr Peter ten Hoopen's examination of early examples from museums and private collections reveals that, historically, two thirds of these textiles were actually asymmetrical. This discovery challenges an academic consensus that has persisted since 1912, and highlights a previously overlooked level of creative ingenuity-inviting greater admiration for the women who wove these complex designs.
Today's ikat weavers on Timor, like many foreign scholars before them, seem unaware that asymmetry was once a dominant design principle. Many continue to assert that perfect symmetry has always been the tradition. Yet the historical textiles tell a different story. Ten Hoopen's groundbreaking findings justify his focus on early specimens, which often display a greater degree of design sophistication than their contemporary counterparts.
It is striking that earlier researchers failed to recognise or report the prevalence of asymmetry in Timorese textiles. In early pieces, asymmetry is not only present but often dominant. This oversight reflects a broader pattern of neglect: textiles have historically been marginalised in Southeast Asian material culture studies, overshadowed by architecture, sculpture, weaponry, and jewellery. The author hopes that his historical investigations help correct this imbalance by demonstrating that these textiles embody far more artistic ingenuity, intellectual depth, and craftswomanship than previously acknowledged.
Today's ikat weavers on Timor, like many foreign scholars before them, seem unaware that asymmetry was once a dominant design principle. Many continue to assert that perfect symmetry has always been the tradition. Yet the historical textiles tell a different story. Ten Hoopen's groundbreaking findings justify his focus on early specimens, which often display a greater degree of design sophistication than their contemporary counterparts.
It is striking that earlier researchers failed to recognise or report the prevalence of asymmetry in Timorese textiles. In early pieces, asymmetry is not only present but often dominant. This oversight reflects a broader pattern of neglect: textiles have historically been marginalised in Southeast Asian material culture studies, overshadowed by architecture, sculpture, weaponry, and jewellery. The author hopes that his historical investigations help correct this imbalance by demonstrating that these textiles embody far more artistic ingenuity, intellectual depth, and craftswomanship than previously acknowledged.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Hong Kong
Hong Kong
Publishing group
Hong Kong University Press
Illustrations
310 color illus.
Dimensions
Height: 319 mm
Width: 245 mm
Thickness: 33 mm
Weight
2038 gr
ISBN-13
978-988-74710-5-9 (9789887471059)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Peter ten Hoopen began collecting ikat textiles from the Indonesian archipelago in the late 1970s. His partnership with Lisbon's Museu do Oriente in 2014 led to the first exhibition of Indonesian ikat to display materials from across the archipelago, which would then become the model for the more comprehensive 2017 exhibition Fibres of Life at the University Museum and Art Gallery, The University of Hong Kong. ten Hoopen is currently a PhD candidate at Leiden University.