Archive for the ‘Textile Techniques’ Category
A Resounding Success: 2015 Summer Textile Apprenticeship Program
The two fiber artisans that I chose to travel to Manabí province in coastal Ecuador to learn the pre-Columbian spinning and weaving techniques of the ancient Manteño and their forebearers turned out to be terrific apprentices. Janet and Amber, both hailing from northern California, quickly learned the traditional coastal Manabí methods of spinning, dyeing using fresh leaf indigo and weaving on a vertical loom. Read the rest of this entry »
Textile Videos
VIDEO:
THE ANCIENT COTTON FIBER ART OF MANABÍ PROVINCE, COASTAL ECUADOR
Preparing seed cotton, spinning it with a hand supported spindle, dyeing yarns with vegetable dyes, and weaving of bags and hammocks on an indigenous vertical loom is a coastal Ecuadorian fiber art that has been transmitted by peasant women from generation to generation for millennia. Read the rest of this entry »
Ecuador Wants to Reclaim Traditional Knowledge of its Artisans
It seems that the Ecuadorian government under President Rafael Correa is interested in reclaiming traditional knowledge of its artisans, both in the present and in the past. This is the first government in all of Ecuador’s history that has taken such an interest! So, the four thousand year old cotton fiber tradition of Manabí Province in coastal Ecuador that I have been documenting since 1976, hopefully can now be rescued from obscurity with the help of the civic center Cuidad Alfaro, located in the city of Montecristi, Manabí.
At Cuidad Alfaro’s request, I travelled there this past March in order to introduce this cotton fiber tradition represented by Doña Luz and her daughter, Trinidad who is the last active practitioner of this millenarian fiber art. Hopefully with the support of Cuidad Alfaro, which is planning to establish a “living” museum where 10 different key artisans of the Province can carry out their work, this spinning and weaving tradition will finally be recognized and valued. So things are moving ahead and Trinidad and I have recruited some youngsters from the village of Zapote to learn and carry on the tradition. Trinidad’s 9 year old niece, Melina, is learning how to spin, and another older teenage niece, Catalina was persuaded to learn how to weave after seeing Trinidad and I discuss this ancient tradition on a local TV station.
Especially significant for me during this short, week long trip was to have the opportunity to witness and capture on video the very moment Melina learned how to spin.