Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Miao and Dong Textile Treasures Kali Guizhou Asian Art Museum

Pam Najdowski, who specializes in Miao silver work and fine embroidered and batik textiles, along with Chinese Children's hats, antique baskets and wooden tools, has travelled widely and to Guizhou many times.  She has an extensive knowledge of the Miao peoples and their costumes.  I met her at the Tribal Arts Fair.  She has a gallery at Travelers Market in Santa Fe's DeVargas Center.  :  1810 Paseo de la Conquistador, Santa Fe, Mexico  87501  Her e-mail:  pamnajdowski@yahoo.com

The presentation she elected to give to the Asian Art Museum, Society of Asian Art members focussed on her visits to remote villages where she has befriended weavers who gather antique materials to sell to her, so she is always welcome.  

Her representation was beautiful and focussed on Kali and surrounding villages, all of which I had visited.  My jacket which I wore is from this region, and I have one other, which I wore to lecture on Friday; both were well received by other members, who commented favorably.   I bought in my own embroidery example from Guizhou, where I visited the home of embroiderer, and where she told me her story.  She and her husband botrh worked in a factory for a decade after marriage until she had enough money to pay for their two children's education and to buy an apartment, which I visited.  She has so many wonderful objects for sale. We met when she came to the International Womens Club in Shanghai.  She invited me to visit her so I am finally able to do so.

(Images to follow) 

Yoshiko Wada' hosts " Threads of Life"


Threads of Life, with William Ingram, located on Bali, spoke to us about their project which began in 1998.  The gallery opened in 2002.  The project encourages mico economic production and organizes all the small workshops into collaborative participation.  It has become so successful that it is nearly an independent enterprise, with them as overseers.    The plant mordrant project employs natural dyes 100% from plants.

The Bebali Foundation makes sustainable livelihoods for indigenous peoples.
info@ypbb.org    The address of the organization is in Ubud, Bali, Indonesia.   Other sites are:  bebali.org and plantmordant.org







  Jean Howe relating the narrative of their creation of a foundation, and their creation of a community.  Conservator, Joyce Ertel Hulbert is in the immediate background, with Jean Howe in the foreground.

I bought a silk shawl with Silk Thread and natural dyes and its debut was at the reception with the donors to the Yosemite Conservancy in Yosemite in late March...the Spring Celebration.  The chair of the event from Ross, California, introduced herself, as she admired my shawl!

Here is the description, and when I have a photo, will post it.  "This crepe shawl is designed and dyed by the Bebali Foundation with additional dyeing by traditional dyers with whom  the Bebali Foundation and Threads of Life work .  The Bebali FOundation's primary work over the past 15 years has been to recover traditional dye recipes, teach sustainable methods of harvesting and cultivation of these dye plants in the communities that Threads of Life weavers work.   In creating this wearable art, the Bebali Foundation's dye team uses only sustainably harvested plants.  This cloth has been mordanted with a plant mordant, Symplocos sp (www.plantmordant.org) and dyed with Terminalia catappa as the base and an over dye of Indigo - Strobilanthes cursia.  "  

COVERING THE MOON Face Veils by Gillian Vogelsang-Eastwood

My veils in the Leiden Institute published in this book.  The Leiden Institute bought my collection of more than 20 veils including a horse hair padjara, and Gillian, the wife of the director included a couple in this book of veils throughout the Islamic world.  Thanks to Carol Bier, who gifted me with the book, I am now able to see my beloved veils in print.  I collected them while consulting with the museums of Uzbekistan, in particular the Samarkand Museum of Fine Arts, which no longer exists, and the museums in Bukhara and Kiva.  It was wonderful to help them develop business sponsorship, to upgrade their exhibition spaces and their administration of the museums.   They also developed gift shops for support of the museums and to discourage illegal sale of items in the collection to visitors.

I found the veils in the market place; at the time, they were an overlooked object so I was able to purchase examples used in weddings in particular, but also on a daily basis. Somewhere I must have images of all the veils sent to Leiden.  




to pson.  
















TAC. De Young Museum. Barbara Shapiro. Japan Tour with Yoshiko Wada

Barbara assisted by her daughter shares one of the pieces she dyed
in the Shibori workshops in which she participated. 

A shibori dye skirt with woven in inlay pleats 

One of Barbars' prized collected baskets. 

Barbara bought several baskets, as her own art is basket sculpture; she has returned with materials and new ideas for her basket sculptures and was commissioned to do a basket on site in Japan.

See websites for Barbara Shapiro on her Surface Design blog.    She bought and donated some shibori samples to the Cooper Hewitt Museum, as the curator, Susan Brown, was also on Yoshiko Wadas tour.

Some interesting facts from her discussion and slide presentation of her tour.

Mature tea leaves have alluminum in them.

Mechanized labor now permits two women to do what 80 women did, in terms of weaving silk.

Most silk in Japan comes from China.  In Japan, the demographic has shifted from 80,000 to now 500 growing silkworms...

Safflower is fugitive dye.  It cannot be exposed to light.  They visited Yoshimuni home, where three generations have dyed with safflower to produce beautiful red robes.

These shops were recommended:  Kanaegi, Kyoto.  (her favorite)  Galerie Galerie,

Museums:  She visited the Shinto Indigo museum   the Mingei museum in Tokyo as well as the Dover Street Mall(also in London)  The Amuse Museum.  21 21 Sight Museum, by Miyaki,  The Miho Museum outside Kyoto which was displaying Indian Chintzs and Dutch porcelain.  .

She visited Kozo Paper Maker.  She bought poem strips and some paper samples. She shows up woven paper jackets.   We also see "rice in manifestations", or rice straw amulets.  Puppet floats are present in festival.

Kakeshibu is a cloth used in the production of saki.  She found pieces.

Mrs Hanma is 94 and revered shibori maker.

Metallic yarns are coated with alumninum.

Linen or Cotton clampled in lye bath shrinks it.