EMMA's PAGE
EMMA studying a few of my dolls
during a visit to my home.
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INSTALMENT THREE:
INDIGENOUS DOLLS AND THEIR TRAJE
(By: Emma Jackson)
Instalment 3: Indigenous
Guatemalan dolls and their traje
Events conspired
against me and I wasn’t able to follow up my last blog in a timely
fashion! But here I am, back again and
as enthusiastic as ever about indigenous dolls and textiles from Guatemala. In
my previous blog I explained a little about traje
(the traditional dress that is worn in Guatemala by some Maya women and,
more unusually, Maya men). In the first
part of this blog I will focus on a selection of dolls made from pieces of old,
worn-out traje. Aside from worry dolls, these are the dolls
most commonly associated with Guatemala.
By contrast, in the second part of the blog I will focus on a very
special pair of dolls wearing bespoke miniaturised traje. At a glance Guatemalan
dolls can often look quite similar but I hope that by highlighting their
differences it shows that there can be more to them than first meets the eye!
Photo: Emma
Jackson. A selection of dolls wearing
fragments of old traje
The selection
above are all dolls wearing clothes made from pieces of old traje.
The dolls date from the 1940s (the larger pair at the back) to 2012
(the three small examples at the bottom right).
As I noted in my last blog, different towns are often associated with
different textile designs. However, it
is really difficult to identify which town a doll is from because the fragments
of traje are so small. If you are lucky though, you may be able to
find one that is labelled with its origin.
These are usually older examples, such as the one below from the
Municipality of Chinautla. This doll represents
a Poqomam woman, one of Guatemala’s 21 Maya ethnic groups.
Photo: Emma
Jackson. A doll from Chinautla
Another type of
Guatemalan doll that is also dressed in pieces of old traje is the weaver doll.
These depict Maya women weaving with a backstrap loom – the process I
described in my previous blog – such as the one below.
PHOTO: Emma
Jackson. A weaver doll
This example
also demonstrates how tricky it can be to identify the origin of Guatemalan
dolls’ traje. I bought it from an artisans’ market
called ‘Compañía de Jesús’ in Antigua, Guatemala, in January 2018. The vendor told me that the doll was made by children
in neighbouring San Antonio Aguas Calientes.
However, I was puzzled because I didn’t recognise the textile fragments
used for the doll’s clothes as being typical of San Antonio traje.
When I specifically asked the vendor where the textile fragments were
from, she explained that the doll’s huipil
(blouse) and corte (skirt) were
made from corresponding pieces of a second-hand huipil and corte from
Santa María de Jesús, a town a little under 10 miles by road from San
Antonio. I was lucky, therefore, to have
had the opportunity to ask the vendor about this particular example as,
otherwise, I would have found it very difficult to identify the origins of its
clothing!
I think that
when textile fragments that were once worn are used to clothe dolls it adds to
their authenticity. However, because the
clothing is not scaled down, these
dolls do not necessarily provide an accurate representation of locally specific
traje.
By contrast, the two beautiful examples shown below wear
miniaturised bespoke versions of San Antonio traje.
PHOTO: Emma
Jackson. A pair of Benjamín García dolls
wearing San Antonio traje
These dolls were
made by Benjamín García in 1984.
Benjamín was interviewed for a 1981 edition of National Doll World and the article provides an interesting insight
into his dollmaking activities. At the
time of the interview, Benjamín was in his 50s and was married with three
children. He started to learn how to
make dolls in the early 1960s and, in time, came to specialise in those dressed
in examples of traje from different
towns in Guatemala. Benjamín also worked
at the Tourism Office in Antigua and one of his motivations in making this type
of doll was that he wanted to familiarise tourists with the variety of
Guatemalan textiles.
As with the
dolls made from re-purposed traje,
their basis is a wire frame around which is wrapped skin-coloured cloth. The bodies are bulked out with wood shavings and
the faces are made from a piece of dried corn husk. Finally, the whole body is wrapped in muslin
and the facial features are sewn on. In
the article, Benjamín explained that it was very important for him that his
dolls were clothed in accurate miniature representations of regional traje and he went to great lengths to
ensure this. For example, he ordered the
scaled down traje on a bespoke basis
from weavers of the different communities represented. This sometimes entailed Benjamín chasing up
late orders by telegram or going in person to the weaver’s village to discuss
the finer details of the outfit. If his
standards were not met, he insisted on the traje
being remade. The outfit could take over
a month for the weaver to complete.
Undoubtedly, the
female doll’s traje does accurately
record that worn in early 1980s San Antonio.
In fact, even the marcador (double-sided
cross stitch) work for which San Antonio is so well known is reproduced in
miniature on the tzute (multi-purpose
cloth) the doll is carrying. However, while the male doll’s outfit is
accurate, it is also a rather idealised depiction of reality because by the
early 1980s only a handful of men still wore traje in San Antonio.
PHOTO: Emma
Jackson. A miniature tzute featuring marcador designs
Although there
is a difference in the clothing of dolls made from re-purposed clothes as
opposed to those with scaled down bespoke clothing, I think that both types have
their own charm!
Next time, I’ll be focusing on a completely different selection of indigenous Guatemalan dolls…
Reference:
Keller de García,
Joanne, ‘Guatemalan Doll Maker, Benjamin García’, National Doll World, 5.5
(1981), 12-15
NOTE:
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INSTALMENT 2:
TRADITIONAL DRESS FROM SAN ANTONIO.
(By: Emma Jackson)
As promised, in this blog I want to highlight the
skills of the weavers who work with a backstrap loom, and the textiles they
produce.
Traditional dress is worn by many indigenous women
in the more rural areas of Guatemala, and different textile designs are often
associated with a specific town. The
weavers of San Antonio Aguas Calientes – which is a short journey by chicken
bus from Antigua – are particularly renowned for their highly skilled, innovative
and beautiful garments and other textiles that are handwoven on a backstrap
loom. Although men from San Antonio no
longer wear indigenous dress, many of the town’s women continue to wear it on a
daily basis. It consists of several
pieces, the key items of which are as follows:
The
corte – a skirt usually made of a length
of material sewn at both ends to form a tube.
·
The
faja – a sash or belt that not only
is used for decorative purposes but is also essential for securing the corte in position.
·
The
tzute – a multipurpose carry cloth.
·
The
huipil – similar to a blouse.
This ensemble of clothing is called traje, such as the example shown below.
Since San Antonio is famous for its handwoven huipils, it is worth looking in more
detail at how this garment is made.
·
Before
starting to weave, the weaver has to set up the backstrap loom. This is a complicated and tedious process
that can take more than two days and entails, for example, winding the skeins
of thread into balls and then forming the warp on a warping board (see photo
below).
Photo: Emma Jackson.
My first attempt at setting up a warping board.
·
The loom itself comprises various wooden batons, a rope to tie the loom to a tree or a post in the home, and a leather strap that goes around the waist of the weaver. After assembling the loom, the weaver is ready to start weaving.
The loom itself comprises various wooden batons, a rope to tie the loom to a tree or a post in the home, and a leather strap that goes around the waist of the weaver. After assembling the loom, the weaver is ready to start weaving.
Photo: Emma Jackson.
My first attempt at weaving a
basic design – pepita (zig zags).
San Antonio huipils are made of pre-dyed cotton thread and are brocaded, whereby
designs are woven into the cloth, as contrasted with embroidery, whereby
designs are sewn onto finished cloth. In
terms of designs, there are two main features associated with San Antonio huipils.
The first of these comprises rows of brocaded, geometric patterns such
as tijeras (scissors), jaspe (ikat), arco (arch), mosquito, pie de chucho (foot of the dog), marimba and pepita (zigzags), which are woven from memory and visible on only
one side of the textile (The technical name for this technique is “single-faced
supplementary weft brocading”).
Photo Emma Jackson.
A finished huipil (c. 2012) showing single-faced geometric patterns and
double-faced marcador designs of
birds and flowers. (I wish I could say
that this was my handiwork!!)
·
The
second feature consists of curvilinear marcador
representations of flora and fauna.
This term is derived from the marker or sampler associated with European
cross-stitch, and it is thought that weavers first copied small motifs from
samplers introduced to San Antonio in the early 1900s. The influence of these European sources is
also seen in the idiosyncratic depictions of, for example, sleighs and
bicycles, that are sometimes found on San Antonio textiles. The reason for which San Antonio traje is renowned throughout Guatemala,
is that the marcador designs are
identical on both sides of the textile. (The technical term for this technique
is “double-faced supplementary weft weaving”).
Not only are these designs very complicated and laborious to weave, but
they are also expensive since they require more thread.
·
Finally,
to form a huipil, two completed textile panels of approximately the same size are
whipstitched together, leaving a space in the middle for the head to fit
through. This fabric is then folded in
half and sewn up two sides, leaving spaces for armholes.
Photo: Emma Jackson.
The two textile panels that form the above huipil before being folded in half and stitched together.
Depending on the specific style, it can take between
four and six weeks, working six days each week for eight hours per day, to
weave a huipil. However, San Antonio huipils that are covered entirely in marcador designs can take up to a year to weave!
Changes in Traje Designs
Far from being a static dress form untouched by
modern life, the traje produced and worn
in San Antonio has undergone dramatic changes since the beginning of the 1900s. This earlier manifestation was a plain
affair, with a huipil handwoven from
handspun, undyed cotton of pale brown with narrow white warp (vertical) stripes
and a smattering of small marcador motifs. By the 1920s, however, huipils were filled with bands of brightly coloured single-sided
geometric designs. Alongside these
geometric designs, from around the 1930s or 1940s, marcador curvilinear representations of flora and fauna also became
incorporated into huipils; in fact,
some contemporary huipils are
completely covered by such marcador designs. At the same time, the background colours of huipils developed from pale brown in the
early 1900s to the current royal blue and purple. Finally, indigo-blue skirts with
white pinstripes, known as morgas,
have been superseded by brightly coloured cortes
with vertical stripes in jaspe (ikat) material woven on a
treadle loom. So, although each town is associated with a
different design, in practice there are ever-increasing opportunities for interactions with ideas and people from both within
Guatemala and beyond, leading to a more “mix and match” approach to traje.
Photo: Emma Jackson.
A contemporary jaspe corte (skirt)
and a marcador faja (belt).
Traje and
Indigenous People
With a bit of practice, it’s easy to spot a San
Antonio huipil when you are out and
about in Antigua. However, there are
subtle variations in the form and design of each female’s traje that are much harder for non-locals to recognise (I’m
definitely still learning!). In fact, traje can provide lots of information
about the female who wears it, such as the language they speak, their family
group, economic status, religion, social standing and age. In addition, there are personal touches that
show the wearer’s inclination towards either conservative or imaginative forms
of self-expression.
Although many women wear traje in rural areas, sadly, in urban areas many indigenous people have
abandoned their traje to avoid being
subjected to discrimination. However, more
recently, professionals and students in particular are more likely to assert
their Maya identity in defiance of such discrimination.
I think that you will agree that the time and skill
involved in the production of these handwoven huipils is pretty breath-taking!!
And of particular interest to me (and all you other doll collectors out
there) is that once these huipils are
old and worn, they are sometimes recycled and turned into dolls! But more about that in my next blog…
Until next time!
* * *
INSTALMENT 1
MEXICAN and GUATEMALAN dolls.
(By Emma Jackson).
Carole has kindly invited me to write a few pieces
about my travels in Guatemala and Mexico.
I’ve been to both of these fascinating countries several times before on
shorter trips, but last summer I had the pleasure of spending three months
there as part of my PhD research. My
research project focuses on how people use objects – in this case, dolls
handmade by Maya people – to help construct and express their identities. It’s a project that I’ve wanted to do for many
years because it ties together my interest in textiles, dolls clothed in
regional/national dress and travel!
Although I’ve spent the last eighteen months interviewing people who
make and also buy these dolls, for these blogs I just want to focus on the
dolls themselves – how they are made and, where possible, a little information
about the people who make them.
I started my trip in Antigua, which is a beautiful city filled with colonial-era buildings. Views of the city are dominated by three huge volcanoes: Agua, Acatenango and Fuego. No doubt you will have heard of Fuego since, tragically, at least 75 people have perished in its recent eruption which destroyed several communities that are located to the south of the volcano.
I started my trip in Antigua, which is a beautiful city filled with colonial-era buildings. Views of the city are dominated by three huge volcanoes: Agua, Acatenango and Fuego. No doubt you will have heard of Fuego since, tragically, at least 75 people have perished in its recent eruption which destroyed several communities that are located to the south of the volcano.
Agua Volcano, Antigua.
Antigua is a key tourist destination in Guatemala
and has many markets and shops packed with textiles and other crafts, including
worry dolls. These dolls are often made
in the villages surrounding Antigua and I was lucky enough to sit with one doll
maker whilst she showed me the various stages involved with making one. Like many women in her village, her
grandmother taught her how to make dolls to sell when she was around 10 years
old.
The steps involved in making a two-inch female doll are as follows:
The doll body is formed of a piece of dried cibaque that is bent in half. This plant is used for various crafts in Guatemala, such as basket making, and, if softened in water, it is also used to tie together tamales. (Tamales are a popular dish in Guatemala and Mexico, and are made of corn dough and other ingredients that are wrapped in corn husks or banana leaves.)
·
The
arms are formed of wire covered in a type of beige coloured paper that has many
uses in Guatemala; for example, dishes such as tacos and tostados are
often served on it. I thought it was
really interesting that although the pieces of cibaque and the brown paper seem mundane, and in any case are hidden
from view, they are linked to activities that have important cultural meanings in
Guatemala.
·
The
head is made of a piece of sponge covered in a fragment of stocking or tights
material.
·
These
components are bound together with thread and tied into position (see photo
below).
·
This
“skeleton” is then partly covered with fabric to represent a simple blouse (huipil).
·
The
doll’s skirt (corte) is made from a faja which is cut in half, lengthways. (A
faja is the narrow strip of textile that would usually be used as a sash
or belt that holds up a female’s actual full-sized skirt). These particular fajas were produced on a loom in Comalapa – a town around 30 miles
by road from Antigua. The miniature
blouse and skirt are tied into position with thread and secured with glue (see
photo below).
Photo: Emma Jackson.
·
The
facial features are then sewn into the face using red, black and white thread,
also from Comalapa.
·
Finally,
the headdress (tocoyal) is glued onto the head.
Although the doll maker showed me how to make a doll
from beginning to end, she usually works with her sister and together they
carry out one stage of the production process on all of the dolls before moving
on to the next stage. For example, when
I went to see her, there were dozens of dolls that were finished apart from the
addition of the headdress. Working as a
team, the sisters can make approximately 144 of these dolls in eight hours (see
photo below). (Twelve dozen is a
standard measurement of sale.) The dolls
are then bought by a vender who sells them at artisan markets, such as those in
Antigua.
The doll maker uses the same process, but with
adaptations, to make the other dolls in her repertoire. For example, for larger dolls of three or
four inches, a folded-up strip of newspaper is wrapped around the torso before
the blouse is placed in position (see photo below).
Photo: Emma Jackson.
Photo: Emma Jackson.
She also makes the tiny one-inch worry dolls (see
photo below) that I remember from my childhood and told me that the dolls have
increased in size over the years to offer customers more choice.
Photo: Emma Jackson.
Photo: Emma Jackson.
It was really interesting to see how much work went
into making the dolls, especially as they are so cheap to buy.
Although these dolls are made from cloth woven with
a footloom, in my next blog, I’ll write a little about the beautiful handwoven
textiles that are produced in and around Antigua using a backstrap loom.
Until next time!
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5 comments:
The woven sash (faja) reminds me alot of the sash used in South Eastern Europe just in different colours. Wonderful information!
Sacha
yugoslavianfolkdolls@blogspot.com.au
Thank you so much for your kind comment, Sacha. (It's lovely to hear from you again).
Emma and Carole,
Thank you so much for this very informative post. I wish I had seen your information about the Guatemala Dolls before I did my seminar on dolls from South America this last summer (2020)(for the UFDC on line convention). I especially love your information about the textiles and the construction of the dolls. Keep up the excellent work, Emma.
Sincerely,
Debbie Troy
Thank you very much for your lovely comment, Debbie! (I have forwarded your comment on to Emma). Carole.
Hi Debbie,
Many thanks for your kind words - your feedback is really appreciated. I'm hoping to complete a further blog instalment soon, so watch this space!
Kind regards,
Emma
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