The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Sunday, May 19, 2013
 
Thai Khon Mask Maker Keeps Disappearing Tradition Alive in the Saphan Mai Area
Various kinds of Khon masks made by Prateep Rodpai on a table at his home in Bangkok, Thailand. Rodpai is one of Thailand's last traditional Khon mask makers. These types of masks are the keystones of ornate glittering costumes used in the stylized classical Thai dance form known as Khon. AP Photo/Apichart Weerawong.

By: Kinan Suchaovanich, Associated Press Writer

BANGKOK (AP).- Any taxi can take you to one of Bangkok's glitzy new shopping malls, but you'll have to poke around and trod carefully down a crumbling, fetid old alley in a working-class district to find a true artifact of genuine Thai culture.

The neighborhood used to be a thriving community of makers of Khon masks, the keystones of ornate glittering costumes used in the stylized classical Thai dance form known as Khon. A street sign for tourists boasts of its glorious past, but most workshops in the Saphan Mai ("Wooden Bridge") area were shuttered years ago.

Come to a small, tin-roofed house some weekend, however, and you'll find 56-year-old Prateep Rodpai, one of Thailand's last traditional Khon mask makers.

The Khon tradition was imported from India around the 10th century. It evolved from a Hindu religious ceremony into a morality play in Siamese royal courts, and has since enjoyed royal favor. The cultural equivalent of Japan's kabuki, Khon used to be performed in important social functions such as funerals.

A typical Khon performance recounts an episode from the Hindu epic Ramayana, called the Ramakien in Thailand. Dancers dressed in glittering costumes perform carefully modulated acrobatic moves to classical Thai music,

The exquisitely painted Khon masks are essential to conveying the characters and moods of a Khon performance. But in a case of trickle-down culture, the masks are also used as decorative objects — displayed in many homes and even Thai restaurants abroad — and as objects of worship.

Prateep can usually be found most weekends at his Bangkok abode working on his masks as he waits for customers to pick up their orders.

"I am the last one to still be doing this here," said Prateep, noting that the food vendor whose stall is a few yards away had been a cutter of glass ornaments — a crucial element that gives Khon masks their sparkle — when he was a boy.

Though some years ago he followed most craftsmen to nearby provinces, moving his workshop to Ang Thong about 70 miles (110 kilometers) north of Bangkok, he still keeps a tiny space here, borrowing an old neighbor's room for storage.

"Some customers refuse to go all the way to Ang Thong to pick up the masks," he explains.

One recent rainy Saturday, Prateep sold three masks, all of them representing characters from the Ramakien. Two were for a Khon troupe and the other for a shaman to use in his ritual.

Some customers come from as far away as the United States. Prateep said that many Thai restaurants abroad display his masks. "Each culture has its distinct motif. And the Khon mask is probably most representative of Thai culture," said Prateep. "Masks do not have to be worn to retain their cultural significance."

In their Bangkok workspace, Prateep and wife Pinthip are putting the final touches to some masks, painting a spot here, gluing some ornaments there. The whole process is an intricate one, with the masks requiring three days to dry in the sun. He can work on two to three masks a day,if inclement weather doesn't back up the production line.

Prateep's uncle, the late Sakorn Yang-keawsot, a Khon performer more famous as a puppeteer, taught him the rudiments of Khon mask-making. Prateep still uses the formula passed down from his uncle for his clay — a mixture of rice powder, some paper starch, a pinch of calcium talc and plenty of cement; he keeps the proportions a closely guarded secret.

Chalermchai Chimchanvej, who rents Khon costumes to media productions and manages a troupe that performs at private functions, has been Prateep's customer for many years. "I come back for the quality. It much more difficult now to find masks with good value."

"We were lucky that factory-made Khon masks are impractical and not permeable," comments Prateep. "Only the handmade masks are breathable. So dancers prefer ours. That leaves us with some room to survive."

Fortunately for Khon, it can still count on Queen Sirikit, wife of King Bhumibol Adulyadej, as a major patron.

"Without Her Majesty's interest, Khon might have disappeared altogether," said Pramate, a Khon lecturer at Banditpatanasilpa Institute. "Gone are the days when you get Khon broadcast on TV in Saturday morning."

It was the 78-year-old Queen who footed most of the bills for this year's epic performance of Nang Loi, an episode from the Ramakien.

All seven performances of Nang Loi, sponsored by the Queen, were sold out in matters of days. It was so well-received that the organizer decided to put on nine additional performances this November.

Pramate said in days gone by, aristocratic families would sponsor their own Khon troupes as a status symbol.

"Since we're living in a capitalist society, art is (now) often seen in terms of profit and loss," Pramate said.

"While I was working on Her Majesty's Nang Loi production, the queen through her secretary thanked the performers for their sacrifice, knowing that these dancers could have been doing something more profitable, but chose to preserve this national art," he said.

The situation may be critical, but it's not hopeless.

Eight students between the age of 9 and 13 recently braved the morning rain to arrive at Bangpakok Primary School at 4 a.m. It was not so much the notorious Bangkok traffic jams that forced them to wake up so early dawn — the Mother's Day performance was scheduled at 11 — but the need for preparation.

Getting properly dressed for a Khon performance can take up to 45 minutes per student. There are 16 steps to fit a boy with his costume, and the clothes must be sewn on the spot, since there are no buttons or zippers.

The boys won great applause for their athletic performance of an episode in the Ramakien where monkeys — one of the many protagonists in the epic — show off their vigor.

Funding from the Bangkok city government pays for the students' costumes and masks. "A costume can cost as much as 20,000 baht (about $640). Without any state funding, all these talents and knowledge would go to waste," said teacher Pornchai Sripraram, who hails from a family of Khon performers.

"The renewed interest in Khon gives us a lifeline," says Prateep. "Without Khon performances, I won't have a livelihood. But without Khon masks, there'd be no Khon. That's the dilemma."

Without young blood, Prateep predicts his craft would be extinct in two generations.

"I hope that there will be a resurgence of interest in Khon. I believe deep in the heart of every Thai there's an urge to explore our past and identity, and Khon is part of who we are."




Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.



Last Week News

October 19, 2010

More than a Century After He Visited Madrid's Prado Museum, Pierre-Auguste Renoir Returns

Google Partners with Israel Antiquities Authority to Bring Dead Sea Scrolls Online

Five New Paintings by Cy Twombly to Inaugurate Gagosian's New Paris Gallery

Egypt's Top Archaeologist, Zahi Hawass, Shows Off New Tomb that Belonged to Rudj-ka

Photographers and Researchers will Examine Images of the Mexican Revolution

Chairs from Taunton Castle, Somerset, Used During the Bloody Assizes to Sell at Bonhams

Preview Berlin, The Emerging Art Fair, Breaks Visitor Records in Its 6th Edition

Fifty Auctions Later, Los Angeles Modern Auctions is Still Going Strong, Sale Totals $1.55 Million

Sotheby's New York to Offer Property from the Collection of the Late Clarence Day

Contemporary Chinese Paintings from the Allen Memorial Art Museum on View at the Akron Art Museum

Forget the Canvas: That's the Message of David Hockney's New Paris Exhibition

New Online Resource Debuts for Nazi-Era Looted Art, Estimates Half of Objects Not Yet Returned

Archaeologists in Egypt Uncover Nearly 4,500-Year-Old Tomb of a Pharaonic Priest

New Evidence Found for Flour in Stone-Age Diet

Mary Kelly: Four Works in Dialogue 1973-2010 at Moderna Museet in Stockholm

'Who will Dare' to Buy the Rarest Movie Poster in the World? The Bride of Frankenstein Poster for Sale

Kimbell Art Museum Commences Construction on Piano-Designed Building

Pictures by Grandmother Who Picked Up Paintbrush in Her Sixties Offered at Bonhams

Japanese Dragons with Long Serpentine and Undulating Body Breathe Fire Into Bonhams Sale

Buckingham Palace Experiences Record Number of Visitors in 2010, Highest in 16 Years

Bellevue Arts Museum Appoints Marsha Wolf Director of Development

A Fixture of South Florida's Contemporary Art Scene, Art Palm Beach Returns in January

American & European Furniture & Decorative Arts at Bonhams & Butterfields on November 1st

National Gallery Acquires Nine Exceptionally Rare Prints by Rembrandt, Durer and Whistler

Never-Before-Seen Works at the Art Gallery of Ontario Reveal a Darker Side to Henry Moore

Over 200 Cultural Heritage Sites at Risk: Study

Innovative Furniture by American Designer Charles Rohlfs Displayed at Metropolitan Museum

Georgia Museum of Art at UGA Wins SEMC Exhibition Award of Excellence and Eight Publication Awards

Aperture Appoints Chris Boot as New Executive Director

Fans Mourn Closing of Liberace Museum in Las Vegas

October 18, 2010

Forget the Canvas: That's the Message of David Hockney's New Paris Exhibition

'Who will Dare' to Buy the Rarest Movie Poster in the World? The Bride of Frankenstein Poster for Sale

New Online Resource Debuts for Nazi-Era Looted Art, Estimates Half of Objects Not Yet Returned

Archaeologists in Egypt Uncover Nearly 4,500-Year-Old Tomb of a Pharaonic Priest

Pictures by Grandmother Who Picked Up Paintbrush in Her Sixties Offered at Bonhams

Buckingham Palace Experiences Record Number of Visitors in 2010, Highest in 16 Years

Japanese Dragons with Long Serpentine and Undulating Body Breathe Fire Into Bonhams Sale

Previously Unseen Images by Photographer Nadav Kander on View at Flowers

Major New Exhibition Dedicated to the Master of Surrealism at The Modern Masters Gallery

Archaeological Work in Copalita Indicates that Population might have Reached more than 2,000

Ordinary Madness Mines the Carnegie Museum of Art's Rich Holdings of Contemporary Art

Pinta, Latin American Modern and Contemporary Art Show Announced at Pier # 92

Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Presents Retrospective "Urban China: Informal Cities"

21c Museum Hotel in Louisville, KY Voted #1 Hotel in U.S. Again

Old Photos found in an Old Diary Reveal Tale of Japan and Jews of World War II

Sotheby's Hits Contemporary, Italian Art Targets with Combined Sales of $48.8 Million

Pompeii: Life in a Roman Village 79 CE Reveals Daily Life in a City Steeped in Mystery

Baltimore is the Last Stop on National Tour for Acclaimed Andy Warhol Exhibition

Coveted Collection of American Muscle and Classic Cars Up for Auction in Georgia

Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen is Showcasing a Selection of Works from the H+F

Stuart Shave/Modern Art Presents the First Solo Exhibition of Nasreen Mohamedi's Work in London

Mary Kelly: Four Works in Dialogue 1973-2010 at Moderna Museet in Stockholm

Fans Mourn Closing of Liberace Museum in Las Vegas

SLICK: The Fair for Contemporary Art Discoveries Opens Its Fifth Edition this Week in Paris

Ground-Breaking Exhibition that Explores Picasso's Response to Degas

Largest Commissioned Sol LeWitt Scribble Drawing is Completed

Moore College of Art & Design Presented 2010 Visionary Woman Awards to Wendy Ewald, Judith Leiber and Ann Temkin

October 17, 2010

Jean-Michel Basquiat Show at Modern Art Museum of the City of Paris Fetes His 50th Birthday

SLICK: The Fair for Contemporary Art Discoveries Opens Its Fifth Edition this Week in Paris

Coveted Collection of American Muscle and Classic Cars Up for Auction in Georgia

Baltimore is the Last Stop on National Tour for Acclaimed Andy Warhol Exhibition

Previously Unseen Images by Photographer Nadav Kander on View at Flowers

Major New Exhibition Dedicated to the Master of Surrealism at The Modern Masters Gallery

Archaeological Work in Copalita Indicates that Population might have Reached more than 2,000

Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen is Showcasing a Selection of Works from the H+F

Pinta, Latin American Modern and Contemporary Art Show Announced at Pier # 92

Stuart Shave/Modern Art Presents the First Solo Exhibition of Nasreen Mohamedi's Work in London

Charles Fryatt: A British Seaman's Story in the Spotlight at the Imperial War Museum North

Murderer's Row and Miracle On Ice make November Sports Auction One for the Ages

QUAD, in Derby Announces Five New Members of Staff who have Joined the Team

Extensive Pablo Picasso Exhibition Opens at the National Gallery of Denmark

Explore the Evolution, Essence and Influence of the Japanese Print at the Legion of Honor

'Charlotte's Web' Cover Art Fetches $155K at Heritage Auctions in New York City

Italy's Largest and Most Important Art Fair, Arte Fiera Art First, Celebrates its 35th Edition

Sotheby's October Sales of Italian Art and Contemporary Art Realise the Outstanding Total of £40.1 Million

Exhibition of Titian Masterpieces Opening at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta

Works by Lynda Benglis, Spanning 40 Years of Creative Output, on View in Rhode Island

From Whimsical to Wacky Rare Pens Take Center Stage at 10th Annual NYC Pen Show

Milwaukee Art Museum to Celebrate Architecture in 2011 with Ambitious Exhibitions

Center for Architecture Presents Exhibition Featuring Innovative Building Technologies and New Construction Techniques

Audrey Hepburn Stamps Fetch $606,000 to Help Educate Children in Sub-Saharan Africa

New Publication from the Royal Collection: The Queen's Dolls' House by By Lucinda Lambton

Tate Movie Project Begins Second Stage of Its UK Tour

17th Century Portrait Returns to Lydiard House

October 16, 2010

Exhibition Reveals How Gustave Courbet Realized the Vision of a Poetic Art of Modernity

Works by Lynda Benglis, Spanning 40 Years of Creative Output, on View in Rhode Island

Extensive Pablo Picasso Exhibition Opens at the National Gallery of Denmark

Exhibition of Titian Masterpieces Opening at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta

Italy's Largest and Most Important Art Fair, Arte Fiera Art First, Celebrates its 35th Edition

'Charlotte's Web' Cover Art Fetches $155K at Heritage Auctions in New York City

Explore the Evolution, Essence and Influence of the Japanese Print at the Legion of Honor

Sotheby's October Evening Sales of 20th Century Italian Art and Contemporary Art Total $48.8 Million

Tate Modern's "Sunflower Seed" Exhibit by Ai Weiwei Closed to Visitors as Health Risk

Major Exhibition at Brooklyn Museum Redefines the Role of Female Pop Artists

Works in 2, 2½ & 3 Dimensions by Acclaimed British Artist Tom Phillips at Flowers

Louvre Offers an Overview of Russian Contemporary Art Featuring Works by Twenty Artists

Tate Acquires New Works by Emerging and Leading International Artists at Frieze Art Fair

Lust and Vice: The 7 Deadly Sins from Dürer to Nauman Opens at Kunstmuseum Bern

New Installation of Work by Contemporary Artist Alinah Azadeh at the National Portrait Gallery

Lost Manuscripts from the Sistine Chapel to be on View in the United States for First Time

Musée Rodin Presents First Henry Moore Retrospective in Paris in 30 Years

UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive Presents Marjolijn Dijkman: Theatrum Orbis Terrarum

'Happy Birthday, Mr. President': 1962 JFK Birthday Cake Decoration Readies for Public Auction in Dallas

Altered Images Depict Horrors of Pollution

Part One of Jerry Hall's Art Collection Sells For Exceptional Sum of £2.3 Million

Recovered Monet to Go Back on View in Poland

Woman Pleads Not Guilty in Colorado to Art Damage

U.S. Court of Appeals Confirms Museum of Fine Arts, Boston is Rightful Owner of Kokoschka Painting

Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale in New York Expected to Exceed $200 Million

Milwaukee Art Museum to Celebrate Architecture in 2011

From Whimsical to Wacky Rare Pens Take Center Stage at 10th Annual NYC Pen Show

Center for Architecture Presents Exhibition Featuring Innovative Building Technologies and New Construction Techniques

October 15, 2010

Kunsthaus Zürich Revives First Museum Exhibition Devoted to Pablo Picasso

Tate Modern's "Sunflower Seed" Exhibit by Ai Weiwei Closed as Health Risk

Part One of Jerry Hall's Art Collection Sells For Exceptional Sum of £2.3 Million

New York City's Whitney Museum of American Art Sells Buildings to Fund Move

Works in 2, 2½ & 3 Dimensions by Acclaimed British Artist Tom Phillips at Flowers

Lost Manuscripts from the Sistine Chapel to be on View in the United States for First Time

Tate Acquires New Works by Emerging and Leading International Artists at Frieze Art Fair

Major Exhibition at Brooklyn Museum Redefines the Role of Female Pop Artists

New Installation of Work by Contemporary Artist Alinah Azadeh at the National Portrait Gallery

Lust and Vice: The 7 Deadly Sins from Dürer to Nauman Opens at Kunstmuseum Bern

Royal Academy of Arts Announces Jeff Koons as New Honorary Member of the Royal Academy

19th Century Quill Pen Given to Russian Prince Aleksander Gorchakov to Sell for £100,000 at Bonhams

Up to 100 Greek Culture Ministry Workers Shut Down the Acropolis, Clash with Police

Jewish Museum in New York Exhibiont Shows Key Works by Top Women Artists

Joshua Hagler and George Pfau: Nearly Approaching Never To Pass at Reaves Gallery

Iconographic Analysis Conducted by Archaeologists on Murals Reveal Maya Military Life

Museum of American Finance To Display Jeweled Monopoly Set and Host Tournament

World Records for David Hockney, Aaron Young, Sterling Ruby & Dana Schutz at Phillips de Pury

Frieze Art Fair Features 173 of the World's Most Exciting Contemporary Art Galleries

Exhibition at Yale Center for British Art Assesses the Career and Legacy of British Architect James Stirling

U.S. Collector and Gallery Owner Larry Gagosian Tops 2010 Art Review Power List

Exhibition at Berlin's German Historical Museum Views Hitler's Hold on Germans

Art World Acts to Save Energy and Money, Mayor Launches Green Visual Arts Guide at Frieze Art Fair

Christophe Cherix Appointed Chief Curator of Prints and Illustrated Books at MoMA

Christie's Evening Auctions of Post-War and Contemporary Art and the Italian Sale Realise $61.2 Million

Design of the Century: Works in Glass and Grand Style Highlight Fall Auction of 20th Century Decorative Arts

Louvre Offers an Overview of Russian Contemporary Art Featuring Works by Twenty Artists

Court: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston can Keep Work Sold in Nazi Era

Woman Pleads Not Guilty to Colorado Art Damage

Recovered Monet to Go Back on View in Poland

October 14, 2010

The Audrey Hepburn Stamp: A Portrait of Eternal Beauty to Be Sold by Schlegel Briefmarken

Frieze Art Fair Features 173 of the World's Most Exciting Contemporary Art Galleries

Art World Acts to Save Energy and Money, Mayor Launches Green Visual Arts Guide at Frieze Art Fair

U.S. Collector and Gallery Owner Larry Gagosian Tops 2010 Art Review Power List

Exhibition at Yale Center for British Art Assesses the Career and Legacy of British Architect James Stirling

19th Century Quill Pen Given to Russian Prince Aleksander Gorchakov to Sell for £100,000 at Bonhams

Exhibition at Berlin's German Historical Museum Views Hitler's Hold on Germans

World Records for David Hockney, Aaron Young, Sterling Ruby & Dana Schutz at Phillips de Pury

Museum of American Finance To Display Jeweled Monopoly Set and Host Tournament

Iconographic Analysis Conducted by Archaeologists on Murals Reveal Maya Military Life

Royal Academy of Arts Announces Jeff Koons as New Honorary Member of the Royal Academy

Up to 100 Greek Culture Ministry Workers Shut Down the Acropolis, Clash with Police

Jewish Museum in New York Exhibiont Shows Key Works by Top Women Artists

Joshua Hagler and George Pfau: Nearly Approaching Never To Pass at Reaves Gallery

Michelle Obama Says She's Bringing the Arts to the White House to Lift Young People

3,500 Courtroom Sketches by Marilyn Church Heading for Library of Congress

Egypt's Chief Archaeologist Says United States to Return Smuggled Sarcophagi

Russian Claims to Uncover "Caucasian Stonehenge"

Exhibition at Cantor Arts Center Provides a Glimpse into the Practice of Modern-Day Vodou

Exhibition of New Installations, Light Works, Sculptures and Prints by James Turrell at Gagosian

North Sea Paintings by Distinguished Artist John Virtue on View at Marlborough Fine Art

LACMA Debuts World.Class European Costume Acquisition with Fashioning Fashion

National Gallery in London Invites Contemporary Artist Clive Head to Display His Work

New and Key Past Works in First Show by Marina Abramović on View at Lisson Gallery

Important Photographic Archive Acquired for Birmingham Central Library

Sotheby’s Announces the Inaugural Sale of Important Russian Art in New York

Personal Collection of Elton John's Mother Sheila Farebrother Offered to Music Fans Around the Globe

Navy Birthplace in Dispute; Five Communities Claim to Be the Navy's Birthplace

Thomas Moran's Early Landscape of Juniata Valley, Pa, is Acquired by National Gallery of Art

Galerie St. Etienne Shows Works by Max Beckmann's Student, Marie-Louise Motesiczky

Norman Dilworth's First Solo Show in Britain in Almost 30 Years Opens at Laurent Delaye

New Book Says Painting Stored Behind a Couch for 25 Years may Be a Michelangelo

Ex-J. Paul Getty Museum Curator Marion True's Trafficking Trial Ends in Italy

Sotheby's Launches App for iPhone and iPad

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site