love, hate, love – Malioboro graffiti


Allow me to conclude my Yogyakarta posts (which started a few months back) with this beautiful graffiti. I was walking back and forth measuring Malioboro street on my last night in Yogyakarta hunting for objects. One door shop stood out from the rest because it was decorated with graffiti. Only by then it was half covered with items from street vendors. Around ten o’clock the street vendors started to pack their merchandise away. By ten thirty the street was almost clean of them,and I got a clear view of the art.


I took 6 frames using my tripod to cover the whole piece. Stitching was done using Autopano before importing the result back to Aperture, where I edited the RGB levels and enhanced the contrast, saturation, and vibrancy.

I hope you enjoy this piece (click on the image to view a higher resolution one). Take care and have a great weekend!

Travel Theme: White


Daralaut

Here’s a small contribution to this week’s Travel Theme by Ailsa and her Where’s my backpack? blog to commemorate the International Day of Peace.

These black-naped terns (Sterna sumatrana) were overwintering here in northern Bintan. November-December is the best time to see them, if you are prepared to get wet. They came in in huge flock, occupied most of the offshore rocks and turned the color to white as well from their feces. But it is togetherness of the terns that we can copy from. As mother Teresa once put it: “If we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other”.

May peace be with us.

Wayang Brayut and other giant wayang murals of Yogyakarta


The last time I saw big mural under a flyover was in Bandung last year. So when a taxi driver in Yogyakarta brought me to Lempuyangan Flyover near the old Yogyakarta train station, I stared with awe. The whole stretch of the flyover’s Y-shapped pillars were covered with amazingly beautiful mural, depicting traditional wayang in various forms.

Apparently these murals have been there since 2007, when Jogja Mural Forum started the initiative and invited 6 artists to decorate it in an event called Tanda Mata dari Jogja (memento from Yogya).

Wayang brayut 001

Wayang brayut 002

Wayang brayut 007

The murals tell a lot of stories and social messages. This awesome Wayang Brayut with blue background, for one. Brayut is figure from wayang kulit (leather puppet) and is a depiction of Hariti, a demon who  turned into Buddhist figure of easy birthing as well as that of protection and parenting of children. Hence Brayut, similar with Hariti, is always illustrated with many children.

In Java, the oldest Brayut in her Hariti’s manifestation is found in Candi Mendut (Mendut Temple), and in Bali one can be seen inside Goa Gajah and Candi Dasa. Here, Brayut is pictured at one side of the pillar with a message that read ngemong lan dadi tulodho sing becik, for us adults to be examples for the kids. Socially, it is a critic for the government to be a figure of a responsible leader. On the other side of the pillar is a man carrying white collar figures with a message Eling lan waspodo which translates to be sober and alert.

Wayang Brayut disappeared during Soeharto’s new order regime, as it was often seen to be in contrary with the government Family Planning program. Appropriately, the two artists Sulasno and Dani Juniarto put down the title at the bottom, Wayang Brayut, Riwayatmu Kini (roughly  translates to Wayang brayut, where are you now).

Wayang brayut 003

Wayang brayut 004

Wayang brayut 005

Wayang brayut 006

Weekly Photo Challenge: Near and Far


Image

A massive structure that is taller than the Eiffel Tower and big enough for 4 A380 jumbo jets, Marina Bay Sands Singapore will surely look close even from a distance. Look up, and 194m above us, is a cantilever that spans 65m from its base to form one of the largest public cantilever ever built. Up there, people can enjoy a magnificent view of Singapore. Yes, those small dots at the tip of the cantilever are people!

I shot three frames with 2 stops difference to get this tonemapped image. Please click on it to see a larger version, who knows maybe you can spot yourself among those onlookers <grin>.

Indische Koffie


There is a new restaurant inside Vredeburg Fort Yogyakarta. Opened in April 2012 and branded as Indische Koffie, this place’s setting resembles that of Cafe Batavia in Jakarta‘s old city area. After exploring the fort in the afternoon, a sip of one of its non alcohol Apéritifs in the empty restaurant was a welcome cool in my throat.

Indische koffie 005

please click here to see more pictures and read a little bit about its rawon dish

beyond the sunset and sea


sunset at Sebung Pereh.

Eternity stretches forever
from the end of the world
We stand on the edge
looking out towards heaven
Beyond the sunset and sea

Forever holds the hearts
that stand on the edge of eternity
Paradise is on the far side of the bosom of Elysium
Beyond the sunset and sea

Breathlessly holding our breath
Promising not to let lose
the love we endlessly share
Devoted until eternity, looking
Beyond the sunset and sea

[JoJo Bean, Dodgy Dave and Meggie Gultiano]

silvered leaf monkey of Bintan Resorts


Silver leaf monkey

By now you would already smelled that I have been preoccupied with other unimportant matters such that this blog is left unattended for two weeks. Well I’m still up to my neck with stuffs, such that a few more interesting frames from my Yogyakarta visit need to wait a little while.

I do have, however, this cute silvered leaf baby monkey (Trachypithecus cristatus) that I shot only yesterday during one of the numerous mangrove surveys. Listed as endangered species, this is my first clear shot of the monkey in my 11 years in Bintan Resorts.

It came in view, as my many other lucky shots, only for a few seconds. That time I still had my settings for HDR with auto-bracketing active. I had no time to change the dial. Three shots. This one came out the best. I hope you like it and have a great weekend!

the walls of Kridosono, Yogyakarta


Graffiti kridosono 001

As an aficionado of graffiti, the fact that not so many graffiti is available around the center of Yogyakarta’s attraction raised a question at the back of my head. So I wandered around, asked here and there, and was led to the old Yogyakarta’s stadium, Kridosono.

please click here to see more pictures and read the rest of the story