Cultural History In Focus | “From Lukas to Liefkes?: Age and Authenticity of Gold Jewellery from Sumba, Indonesia” by Francine Brinkgreve

 

Raja Anakalang | 1930 - 1940
© Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen | The Netherlands

 
 

From Lukas to Liefkes?

Age and Authenticity of Gold Jewellery from Sumba, Indonesia

 

by Francine Brinkgreve

 
 

This article is generously provided by Francine Brinkgreve.


 

Pasola | West Sumba
© Stuart Rome

Noble Woman of Anakalang | West Sumba
© Stuart Rome

Shield Dancers | Sumba | 1930
© Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen | The Netherlands

The King of Anakalang with Two Nobles | West Sumba | 1930
© Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen | The Netherlands

Gravesite | Sumba | 1939
© Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen | The Netherlands

Two Warriors | Sumba
© Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen | The Netherlands

Memorial Stone | West Sumba | 1930
© Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen | The Netherlands

 

Francine Brinkgreve

© Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen | The Netherlands

© Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen | The Netherlands

 
 
 

Francine Brinkgreve was born in 1956 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. After obtaining her Gymnasium diploma in 1974, she studied Cultural Anthropology at Leiden University.

During her studies she specialized in the cultures of Indonesia, under supervision of Professor A.A. Gerbrands and Professor P.E. de Josselin de Jong. She also studied museology with Professor P. Pott, Bahasa Indonesia under Professor A. Teeuw, and Balinese culture with Dr H.I.R. Hinzler. As part of her studies, she conducted fieldwork in Bali.

She received her Master’s (doctorandus) degree in 1984, with a thesis about the meaning of offerings in Balinese culture.

From 1988 until 1990 Francine Brinkgreve received a scholarship from WOTRO and the Program of Indonesian Studies to conduct Ph.D. research, including fieldwork, on the subject of offerings and ritual decorations in Bali. This resulted in the publication of a book for a general public, and several academic articles.

After various positions at Leiden University (Faculty of Social Sciences), the Bureau Indonesian Studies (BIS), the project Mondelinge Geschiedenis (Oral History) Indonesia of the KITLV and the Stichting Pelita, in 2004 she was employed by the Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde (National Museum of Ethnology) in Leiden as a member of the team carrying out the Shared Cultural Heritage Project, in cooperation with the Museum Nasional in Jakarta. In 2009 she became coordinator of this cooperative project and was then appointed curator for the Insular Southeast Asia collection at the Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde. Since the formation in 2014 of the National Museum of World Cultures, which includes Museum Volkenkunde in Leiden and the Tropenmuseum in Amsterdam, she is one of the two curators for the Insular Southeast Asia collection.

Francine Brinkgreve has been involved in many exhibitions and has written many articles and has (co-)edited books on various aspects of the material culture of Indonesia and the collecting histories of museum collections. The completion of this PhD thesis was carried out as part of her function as curator, within the framework of the Graduate School of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Leiden University.

 
 
Ancestors and Rituals Daud Aris Tanudirjo Pieter ter Keurs Francine Brinkgreve Art of the Ancestors
Living with Indonesian Art: The Frits Liefkes Collection Francine Brinkgreve, David J. Stuart-Fox Art of the Ancestors
616s3t+975L._SX362_BO1,204,203,200_ (1).jpg
51R+UF-CXcL._SX352_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

Colophon

Author | Francine Brinkgreve
Publication | “Creating Authenticity: Authentication Processes in Ethnographic Museums”
Editors | Alexander Geurds, Laura Van Broekhoven
Publisher | Sidestone Press, Leiden | Mededelingen van het Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde No. 42
Year of Publication | 2013