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>> Bill Buckmaster: Arts and Culture Producer Sooyeon Lee says 150 years of Navajo weaving
will be on view in a new exhibition that opens tomorrow at the Arizona State Museum on the
campus of the University of Arizona.
>> Dr. Ann Lane Hedlund: Whether it's weaving from 150 years ago or from 15 years ago, the designs, the patterns, the colors are
all very vibrant or very subtle and appealing to people.
But I think it's also the cultural stories and the individual personal histories that
draw people to Navajo weaving. >> Sooyeon Lee: Beginning in the 19th century
when art enthusiasts of the East began collecting, the Navajo textile took on epic significance
as representative of the land, the people, the culture and the Navajo way of life.
More than 60 of those Navajo weavings are on view at the Arizona State Museum.
>> Hedlund: Roughly 30 of them are from before 1900. Many of those represent garments that
weavers would have woven for their families or for friends and relatives.
There's a saddle blanket that would have been used on a horse along with a hand woven cinch
to tie the saddle on to the horse.
There are shoulder blankets for wrapping around the shoulders and there are women's dresses
that would have been wrapped around the body as well.
>> Lee: Dr. Ann Lane Hedlund, Director of the Tapestry Center at the museum, is co-curator
for this exhibit. >> Hedlund: We think Navajo weaving probably
began sometime in the mid-1650s. We know that in every period of Navajo weaving, we see
innovation.
We see looking for new ideas. We see embracing new materials as well as designs. This, I
think, is something that gives Navajo weaving vitality today.
This is the oldest rug in the exhibition. It dates between 1800 and 1850 which is a
very interesting time in the Southwest. And for the Navajo people, it's principally before
the Santa Fe Trail and a lot of imported goods reached the Southwest, but they had already
established strong trade with Pueblo Indians and with Plains Indians.
Blankets like this are found as far north as Canada.
>> Lee: The designs on the rug do not tell the whole story. The story is the process
of making the rug. >> Hedlund: Very few Navajo designs have real
symbolic meaning. But what we find is that the process of weaving,
the actual hours of pulling together the materials, the wool, the dyes and then the very long
hours of weaving itself are a part of the meaning of the whole weaving craft to Navajo
people.
It is a sense of the closeness to the land and to the animals, the sheep that have the
sheep's wool in the rugs. >> Lee: So how long does it take to make this
kind of rug? >> Hedlund: It takes generations. It really
does. Navajo weaving--to weave a single rug could take as short as, say, a week for a
simple project.
Or it can take months into years for other projects. One of theweavers who contributed
to this project, Barbara Ornelas, who was one of my consultants and co-curators on the
project, took three years, shared with her sister to weave a very large, very elaborate
rug.
So it can take an immense amount of time. Now I joked by saying it takes generations
because of the learning and because of the lore and because of the deeper understanding
of weaving that it can take to acquire the very special skills to weave Navajo rugs.
>> Lee: Is Navajo weaving a dying art form? >> Hedlund: My answer these days is that there's
clearly no end in sight to Navajo weaving. It is a fact that there are fewer weavers
each year because we're losing many of the elder weavers as they age.
But there are young people learning. Not in as large a number as we'd seen in past decades,
but certainly there are still many young people who are interested. And the interesting thing
to me is that some of them are approaching the craft through the fine arts side.
And they're seeking an identity as individual artists as they pursue this wonderful art
of weaving. >> Lee: This art tells many stories of the
Navajo. Struggle, endurance, pride and most of all, beauty.
>> Buckmaster: Looks like a great show. "Navajo Weaving at the Arizona State Museum: 19th
Century Blankets/ 20th Century Rugs/ 21st Century Views" opens tomorrow.
It will be coinciding with the annual Open House at the Arizona State Museum on the campus
of the University of Arizona.. Admission and parking are free.
The event runs from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. There is also a very nice companion book to
the Navajo weaving exhibit entitled "Navajo Weaving in the Late 20th Century: Kin, Community
and Collectors" authored by Dr. Ann Lane Hedlund and published by the University of Arizona
Press.