Weaving in Beauty

2009 Gathering of Weavers Conclusion

The Weaving News: Life in the Community of Navajo Weaving

November 12th 2009

2009 Gathering of Weavers Conclusion

Sylvia Begaye works on miniature rugs that become part of the clothing worn by her dolls.

Phoenix, AZ I wish I could include a picture of each of the weavers at this year’s event, but I just couldn’t visit with everyone and still attend the afternoon lectures that I wanted to go to.  I did get a chance to talk with Sylvia Begaye, a noted dollmaker who incorporates hand woven textiles into the clothing worn by her creations.  In the picture above, you can see that two of the dolls are wearing Chief Blankets and the seated weaver doll is wearing a handwoven sash belt.  Sylvia lives in Ft. Defiance, AZ and frequently takes her dolls to the Crownpoint Rug Auction.  You won’t find Sylvia’s work in the auction itself; she sells the dolls in the hallway outside the gym where the auction is held.

Monica Glasses and her daughter with some of Monica's work in center and at right. A rug by Monica's mother, Nellie is at left.

Nellie Glasses, who is one of my favorite weavers, wasn’t able to make the trip to the Heard from Rough Rock, AZ, but her daughter Monica Glasses was there with her daughter, aged 7.  Monica’s daughter was non-committal when asked if she was going to learn to weave, but she was clearly proud of the work that her mother and grandmother do.  One of Nellie’s handspun and handcarded pieces is at left in the picture above and Monica wove the Ganado Red in the center and the Chinle design at right.  I hope to see Monica at the Pueblo Grande  Auction later this month.

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Jackson Clarke of the Toh Atin Gallery in Durango, CO discusses the development of design in Navajo weaving.

After a delicious lunch in the Heard cafe, it was time for a talk on rugs by Jackson Clarke of Toh Atin Gallery in Durango, CO.   Jackson discussed the development of design in Navajo weaving and showed many examples.  The Transitional Eyedazzler that he ‘s holding in the picture above is woven with Germantown yarns and dates into the 1880′s, a time when weavers were, with one of two exceptions, anonymous.  Rugs, even when they won prizes, were associated with a trader rather than a weaver, a practice that lasted into the 1930′s.  As time has gone on, weavers have increasingly differentiated their work and developed artist centered markets for it as collectors seek out pieces by D.Y. Begay, Roy Kady or Morris Muskett.   Jackson used Helen Begay’s work as an example.  Helen and her family, building on a multi-generational weaving tradition have devekoped a distinctive pictorial  style called a Burnham rug.  You can see one of Helen’s rugs, titled “Cruising the Rez in My Ford Truck”, in the picture below.  As much as any painting of piece of sculpture, this is a carefully composed, titled and realized work of art.   And the wool is mostly hand spun.

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Helen Begay's "Cruising the Rez in My Ford Truck"

Mark Winter of Toadlena Trading Post followed Jackson’s talk with a discussion of his work in the Two Grey Hills area of New Mexico.  Mark has been very successful in documenting not only the development of weaving patterns and techniques but the weavers and their lives and families.  His book on the subject, a culmination of 20 years of research, will be published in May of 2010 in time for an exhibition on Two Grey Hills weaving at the Wheelright Museum in Santa Fe.  Mark never, ever does anything halfway and I’m definitely going to add his book to my library when it’s published.  In true Mark fashion, he had a 130 weft count Daisy Taugelchee tapestry with him and graciously walked the piece around so that every audience member who wanted to could touch and appreciate Daisy’s work up close.  Mark also talked about the development of design and artistry and display and striking pictorial piece by Pamela Brown depicting sisters united under the sun and moon, even when they are separated by great distances.

Mark Winter holds Pamela Brown's pictorial weaving.

I had hoped that I’d have time to visit with some more of the weavers, but Mark’s talk went over the time limit and was so fascinating that no one noticed.  When I left the auditorium, the museum staff was cleaning up the courtyard and I was vowing that next year I’d get to more of the weavers, especially the new ones.  The Heard has scheduled next year’s Gathing of Weavers for Saturday, November 6.   I’ll see you there!

Hagoshíí (so long for now)

Mary Walker


November 9th 2009

2009 Gathering of Weavers Continued

D.Y. Begay demonstrates natural dyes Navajo style. The wool she's holding is dyed with Navajo tea.

Phoenix, AZ Moving down the Heard Museum’s courtyard at the Gathering of Weavers last Saturday, I smelled Navajo tea and then saw D.Y. Begay with her dyepots.  Also called kota or greenthread, the Navajo tea plant is used to make a beverage as well as a dye for wool.  Depending on the type of pot used, the mordant applied and the amount of time that the wool is processed, the plant yields colors ranging from gold to burnt orange.  D.Y. was also processing some brazilwood and walnut hulls.  Weavers who do their own dyes are always exploring the color potential of various plants.  At a lecture that I attended on Saturday afternoon, Jackson Clarke told the audience about arranging to have Ella Rose Perry, a master weaver and dyer, do a demonstration for an event in Utah.  Grandma Perry was way overdue and when she arrived she explained to a worried Jackson that she’d been stopping at various elevations to collect plants that she just could not get at home!   A picture of a section of  one of Grandma Perry’s rugs appears below. The gold color in this rug is Navajo tea.  Look at how skillfully Ella Rose has used the Crystal weave in the striped areas of this rug.

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A section of a Crystal Rug by Ella Rose Perry

Right behind D.Y.’s dye demonstration, Lola Cody was doing a warp the Navajo way.   If you look carefully at the picture below, you’ll see that she’s using her loom as a warping frame and that she’s ensuring that she her warp dimensions are even by using pipes rather than dowels.  What you can’t see as easily is that the warp is (now sit down) hand spun Navajo-churro wool. Fellow weavers, I am here to tell you that this warp was absolutely beautiful.  That warp was so strong and evenly spun.   Lola let me hold the ball  in my hand and I knew that the courtyard was too crowded for me to make a clean getaway, plus there were a bunch of people there who knew me and I want to stay friends with Lola.  I handed the warp back to her.  Yep, I’m going to try spinning my own warp.

Lola Cody demonstrates warping the traditional Navajo way with handspun Navajo-churro warp.

Barbara Jean Teller Ornelas was working on a matched set of four tapestry grade miniature Chief Blankets.  When it’s complete, the set will include two First Phase patterns, a second phase and a Third Phase.

Barbara Jean Teller Ornelas works on her set of four Chief Blanket miniatures.

You’ll want to see Barbara’s work and her loom set up in the picture below.  You’ll see that the First Phase blanket pattern (left) is composed of stripes and the Second Phase adds nine carefully placed blocks that would line up when worn.  The Third Phase piece will have diamond design elements in place of the blocks.  These small pieces will have about 100 weft threads to the inch.

IMG_3002We’ve worked our way down one side of the courtyard, but there are some new weavers for us to meet tomorrow and you’ll also be interested in some of the rugs that Jackson Clarke and Mark Winter discussed in their talks on Saturday afternoon.   Look for that update on Wednesday; I’m helping with a weaving class tomorrow weaving.  If you’re near the Fiber Factory in Mesa, AZ, stop by and say hello.

Hagoshíí (so long for now)

Mary Walker

posted in It's All About the Rugs | Comments Off
November 8th 2009

2009 Gathering of Weavers at the Heard Museum

The 2009 Gathering of Weavers attracted a large group of weaving enthusiasts. The 86 degree ideal weather didn't hurt either.

Phoenix, AZ The Heard Museum held their second annual Gathering of Weavers yesterday.  It’s a one day event dedicated to weaving and weavers held on the first Saturday in November.   The event is held outdoors in the museum’s courtyard and allows buyers to purchase rugs directly from the weaver.  The museum handles the sales through their shop, allowing the weavers to take credit cards, something that most of them do not do.   I can’t remember exactly what percentage the weaver receives, but I believe it is 80% or more and there was no charge for table space, a big help for the weavers.   Weavers at the event included well known names like Brenda Spencer, Lola Cody, D.Y. Begay and Barbara Jean Teller Ornelas, but newer and weavers who have not had as much public exposure like Monica Glasses, Nathan Harry and Loretta Tahe were also there.   I’ve culled a few pictures from my embarrassingly large assortment so that you can get an idea of the artists and their work.

Loretta Tahe shows her feather rug design.

Loretta Tahe of Hardrock, AZ weaves this distinctive pattern that she calls a Feather Rug.  Each feather has a different design.  Loretta usually sells her work at the Crownpoint Rug Auction and generally weaves one rug each month.   A detail of the expertly woven center feather area is below.

Here's a detail of ther center five feathers in Loretta's rug.

Gilbert Begay wears his handwoven vest.

Gilbert Begay of Crownpoint, NM is a familiar person to many of you who have visited the site before.  Gilbert is a prolific and creative weaver who often stops by when Jennie Slick and I are doing classes in Window Rock.  Although he works full time for Safeway in Farmington, NM, Gilbert spends a lot of his spare time weaving small format rugs and specialty bags like the one seen below.  The wool used in the bag is some that Gilbert and I dyed during our annual Cochineal Cookoff  in Window Rock this August.  Gilbert had used the yarn for the bag below and a small mat.  I purchased one of Gilbert’s bags at a recent auction and will be putting it in the Mercantile later today or in the morning.

One of Gilbert Begay's small bags. The wool in this weaving is dyed with cochineal.

Brenda Spencer shows her latest Wide Ruins design

Brenda Spencer of Dallas, TX and her sister Geneva Shabi of Sanders, AZ were just across the aisle from Gilbert.  Brenda has incorporated a unique wave pattern that is occasionally seen in very old textiles and that we’ve been working on duplicating for the last four years or so.   Brenda has incorporated this element masterfully into the Wide Ruins design that you see above and in a detail below.  The technique is an optical illusion of a curvilinear pattern created by careful manipulation of diagonal lines and weft counts.

Here's a detal of the wave design in Brenda Spencer's Wide Ruins rug.

Geneva Shabi with one of her prize-winning Wide Ruins rugs.

Geneva Shabi, Brenda’s sister also had rugs displaying her dazzling mastery of the Wide Ruins design idiom.  Geneva works for as a relief postmaster when she’s not weaving.  Although you can see that Brenda and Geneva share some influences in their work, Geneva’s take on the Wide Ruins design is very much her own.  You can see a detail from the striped section of her smaller weaving in the picture below.   Look at the immaculately clean lines, the virtuosity of the color choices and the arrangement of the lines to form an absolute symphony of elegance and beauty.  And these are the stripes.

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A detail of a striped area in a Geneva Shabi Wide Ruins rug.

Let’s stop here for today, and wander further down the courtyard tomorrow.  I think I can see D.Y.  Begay, Barbara Jean Teller Ornelas and Lola Cody down there.

Hagoshíí (so long for now)

Mary Walker

 

November 19th 2008

Second Gathering of Weavers Marketplace Scheduled for 2009

Lynn Bullock at the Heard Museum let me know this morning that the Heard Museum has scheduled a second Gathering of Weavers Marketplace for November 7, 2009.

Mary Walker

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November 17th 2008

Gathering of Weavers Picture Gallery: A Guest Post

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Phoenix, AZ I was out of town during the Gathering of Weavers on November 1 and Roberta Sauerwein graciously offered to write an article and take pictures of the event. I’ve heard heard that the event resulted in several sales for the weavers. I’ll be sure to let you know if it will be repeated next year. Here’s Roberta’s report followed by a gallery of the pictures that she took at the event.

Saturday, Nov. 1, was a lovely day for the Gathering of Weavers in the tree lined central courtyard at the Heard Museum in Phoenix, AZ. The entire area was filled with weavers of all ages and tables covered with beautiful rugs of every style and colour imaginable. Gilbert Begay had several small rugs made from handspun, hand dyed yarns. He is also making small handbags from natural coloured yarn. Nathan Harry was weaving a round rug with natural handspun on a bicycle wheel. Marie Dedman had a beautiful Second Phase Chief’s Blanket and a Germantown Revival rug. Helen Edwards was demonstrating the hand spinning that is used to create lovely natural dyed rugs. She made it look so easy. Valerie Allen was demonstrating dyeing with walnuts. D Y Begay was demonstrating dyeing with Sandalwood and Navajo tea. She was getting a beautiful orange from the tea. There were also several of D Y’s beautiful rugs as examples of the range of colours that come from natural sources.

Just outside the courtyard is a newly finished mosaic mounted on the wall. It is a representation of a D Y Begay rug titled Floating Weft Mosaic.

All pictures are courtesy of Roberta Sauerwein.

July 10th 2008

Gathering of Weavers Marketplace

November 7, 2009
9:00 amto4:00 pm

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Location: Steele Auditorium, Heard Museum, Phoenix, AZ
Description: The Heard Museum Shop has scheduled its second Gathering of Weavers Marketplace for November 7, 2009. The event will be held at the Heard Museum’s Steele Auditorium. Weavers may sell their work without any booth or participation fees, with 20% of the purchase price going to the museum to defray the cost of the event. Sales will be rung through the Museum Shop, and each weaver making a sale will receive a check after 3 PM on the day of the sale.

Weavers are encouraged to register for the marketplace in advance by calling Bruce McGee or Lynn Bullock at 800-252-8344.

The Gathering of Weavers will also feature demonstrations and discussions on Navajo textile collecting and promises to be a wonderful day for both weavers and collectors. We’ve already got the date marked on our calendar! See you there.

Above: Weaver D.Y, Begay demonstrates natural dyes at the 2008 Gathering of Weavers.

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