Malaysia National Textile Museum |
So, we headed to the hotel, checked in and then rushed over to the museum not knowing when it closed for the day. The building itself was an interesting old building, used for the railway intially. There were 4 rooms, 3 of textiles one of mostly jewlery.
Malaysia is an interesting country with a wide diversity of people. Malaysia has a large population of Chinese Malaysians and Indians, these two groups have influenced their textiles. The Malaysia National Textile Museum had done a good job of showing not just traditional Malaysian textiles but also those textiles influenced by both the Chinese and the Indians.
Traditional Malay costume, notice the interesting fabric wrapped headpiece the man is wearing. |
Example of display, mannequins looked Malaysian. This was batik using a block or chop. |
The first room downstairs showed the different types of textiles found in Malaysia - batik, warp ikat, weft ikat, songket (supplementary weft patterned with metallic thread), printed and gilded (Indian influence), embrodiered and beaded (Chinese Influence) and bark fabric. There were some nice examples of textiles, mannequins wearing the traditional costumes and large historical photos showing the same style of textile worn by real people. The second room downstairs went through each process with displays showing mannequins doing the process, step by step diagrams and touch screen multi media displays of the actual process. Something unique I've never seen, at each display there was a case that showed everything used in the process; the dyes in each dyeing process, everything to make the beaded shoes etc....
Kebaya, traditional blouse worn in SE Asia with traditional embroidery. |
close up of embroidery |
Upstairs there was a room with more lovely examples with lengthy text about how the textile was made, where it was made, who wore the textile, interesting historical information etc... The last room was where we spent the least time - cases of jewelry and more mannequins wearing full costumes, including jewelry.
costume of bark cloth (top) |
All in all it was a lovely musuem, very educational. We were the only people there! Our only complaint was the lighting could be better, Peter found some of the signs were hard to read because of the lighting (he of course filled out a suggestion card). When we met Peter's boss and wife (Warren and Liz) for drinks we told them where we had been. Liz became very animated and explained the Malaysia National Textile Museum has not offcially opened. It is brand new and has been having it's "soft opening" for the last 4 months. Liz has already been 3 times and was thrilled to hear we'd found it. I just looked it up on the web and found out that once it opens there will be an admission fee of 1 ringgit (about 32 cents)! Weren't we lucky to happen upon this new gem in KL!
More pictures:
The warp ikat display. This woven on a backstrap loom. At the far right in the photo you can see that the loom is attached to a wooden frame. |
Great photos! I am so glad you are there! Did you find the wonderful textile museum in Bangkok at the Bamboo Palace? It is quite wonderful with a great ethnic breakdown from all parts of Thailand. The Bamboo Palace is on the same ticket as the Emerald Buddha. You just have to find the proper building on the palace grounds!
ReplyDeleteWonderful tour of an interesting museum! Thanks for sharing your pictures.
ReplyDeleteDeeDee