FOIM Jun 2011-1
FOIM Jun 2011-1
FOIM Jun 2011-1
The Fondation Carne of Switzerland , dedicated to education and cultural heritage, has given the Ixchel Museum a generous grant to conserve the museums collection of Maya sut. Sut are square or rectangular woven cloths worn as head cloths or folded over the shoulder. The most ornamented and beautiful sut are used in religious ceremonies, worn by the cofrades, the important men and women of the cofradias, or religious confraternities, during the processions honoring their patron saint Smaller sut may be used to wrap ceremonial candles, monstrances, a cross, or used as altar cloths. The Ixchel Museum, with a collection of over 6,000 woven pieces of Maya clothing from more than 115 weaving villages, has done much work in the conservation and storage of its huipil and faja collections but there is still important work to be done conserving the sut. A collection is useless if the pieces are not assessed and recorded, says Curator Emeritus Rosario Miralbes de Polanco, an expert on textiles, fibers and dyes and a former Fulbright Scholar who will lead the project. The textiles cannot be exhibited if there is no data on them or they can not be easily found.
The Museum
of village life in the 1940s. Forty-one of his works, donated to the Ixchel by the Stahl family, will be featured at an exhibit opening in September (photo bottom right). Kathy Rousso gave a talk on maguey fiber at the museum, based on her new book, Maguey Journey: Discovering Textiles in Guatemala. The Museo Ixchel is located on 6a Calle final, zona 10, on the grounds of the Universidad Francisco Marroqun in Guatemala City. The museum is open from 9 am to 5 pm, Monday through Friday, and from 9am to 1pm on Saturday. Admission is Q35 for adults, Q15 for students and Q8 for schoolchildren. For further information on library access and holiday closings and more, please visit museo ixchel.org or telephone 502 2331 3622 Renovation of the museums permanent galleries has begun, funded by Friends of the Ixchel Museum. Beautiful collection pieces have been chosen to replace the present objects on view, and lighting has been installed to spotlight the new map showing the huipiles and weaving villages of Guatemala. The renovated galleries are expected to open in July. The museum bestowed its highest honor, the Ruban Plato, to Thelma Willemsen for her hard work and lifetime devotion to the Ixchel. Thelma founded the Pro-Teje weaving project, which currently supports 185 Maya women. The award is a handwoven scarf with the design of the ceremonial ruban plato from Comalapa ; it was presented at the luncheon given for its weavers on International Womens Day (photo top and bottom left). The 2012 Ixchel Museum calendar will feature the oils of Andres Curruchich, a naf artist from Comalapa, who painted scenes At the annual meeting of FOIM, Anne Girard de Marroquin was honored her years of work for the photo archive, both in the field as a photographer and in the museum as an archivist. Her replacement is Mara Fernanda Garcia, who is responsible for most of the photos in this bulletin. Another new appointment is Mara Cecilia Diaz as Director of Communications. The museums largest fund-raiser, a Sunday picnic, took place March 6, in the magnificent gardens of El Zapote, home of the Pettersen family. Designer Priscilla Bianchis contemporary quilts, exhibited at the museum last year, are featured on a new set of Guatemalan stamps. Barbara Arathoon, the museums associate anthropologist, and Nancy Tunche, assistant to Pro-Teje, gave a workshop and talk on Maya dress to an enthusiastic audience at the Savannah College of Art and Design in April.
Yolanda Acorta, top, presided over FOIM's table at Maya Weekend at the University of Pennsylvania; A Guatemalan woman at the Da Chapn enjoyed dressing herself and her daughter in traditional traje
Many sut are extremely old and delicate and irreplaceable. They are being damaged by the breakage of their fibers that occurs when they are folded without tissue paper padding, when they are piled under more weight than is good for them, and when they are moved. They may become contaminated by handling. Presently, whenever anyone looks for a sut, the others must be moved in the search. For the recent exhibit of sut, all the sut were lifted and moved and touched and wrinkled by the effort to find the best pieces for the
exhibit. If a scholar wants to see and study a particular sut, all the objects must be moved to find a particular piece. In the future, only one box need be opened or one roll unwrapped to find a sut. When the sut are documented, photographed and the information digitized, scholars around the world will be able to study even the most fragile pieces without damaging them, thanks to careful work at the museum and welcome funding from the Carne Foundation.
Cathrine Denton is the great-granddaughter of Carmen Lind Pettersen and remembers watching Mrs. Pettersen painting her watercolors of Maya people and their dress. She grew up in Guatemala, where her family gave her an appreciation of the countrys history, art and culture. She is a pharmacology research fellow at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, where she lives with her husband Levi. Margot Blum Schevill is a museum anthropologist who has been working with Maya textiles since 1978. She studied backstrap weaving in San Antonio AGuas Calientes. She has curated many exhibitions and has written numerous articles about weavers and textiles of Guatemala. She is an independent textile consultant and lives in Berkeley, California. Through the years Ana Smith has worked with visitors to Guatemala by setting up varied programs throughout the country with exposure to the many cultural and natural experiences this country has to offer to a varied clientele. Ana has also been a part of film and documentary production for many different media when the location is Guatemala.
Anabella Schloesser de Paiz has had a decadeslong involvement with the Ixchel Museums. For many years she has been a member of the Ixchels Guatemalan board of directors, known as the Asociacin. She has written several books, including a novel about Guatemalas civil war and a monograph on the countrys carved slingshots.
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In the last FOIM bulletin, the obituary for Sylvia Leonowens was accompanied by a picture of her mother, due to an editing error. The correct photograph of Mrs. Leonowens appears above.
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