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New Mexico Colcha Club - Spanish Colonial Embroidery & the Women Who Saved It (Paperback)
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New Mexico Colcha Club - Spanish Colonial Embroidery & the Women Who Saved It (Paperback)
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New Mexico Colcha Club looks at the history, beauty, and various
styles of New Mexico colcha embroidery, and tells the uplifting
story of how a small group of determined women revived a cultural
tradition destined for extinction. In the 1700s Spanish colonial
women in the isolated province of New Mexico wanted to add beauty
and warmth to their bedding. They worked their homespun yarn in a
long couching stitch to create the flowing needlework that came to
be called "colcha embroidery." Highly sought after and valued, a
detailed embroidered piece could cost upwards of 46 pesos. (During
the same time period, sheep and cows cost 2 and 15 pesos
respectively). However, a century later colcha was on its way to
oblivion. Like many traditional crafts, this beautiful and skilled
artform was becoming obsolete as inexpensive and abundant
commercial cloth, modern styles, and machine-made products became
more desirable and available. Fast-forward to the 1920s and the
Arte Antiguo, a colcha club founded by twelve Hispanic women in the
Espanola Valley of New Mexico. Spearheaded by Teofila Ortiz Lujan
and then later her daughter, Esther Lujan Vigil, these women
heroically sought to rescue colcha and bring it back to its
rightful place as a cherished custom. The women traveled to
churches to examine vintage altar cloth, hunted through attics and
archives in search of examples of the antique embroidery, and
sketched old patterns--all in the hopes of keeping colcha from
extinction and activating a revival of the embroidery. Esther Lujan
Vigil, through her artwork and teaching, keeps the tradition alive
and has elevated colcha from a folk art to a fine art. Divided into
three sections, the first part of thebook traces the roots of the
embroidery tradition and domestic life in colonial New Mexico. The
second part looks at the Arte Antiguo's push in the early twentieth
century to revive this lost art. The third part focuses on Esther
Lujan Vigil's artistic skills and the renaissance of colcha
embroidery today. New Mexico Colcha Club features historical and
recent photographs of colcha work that demonstrate the beauty,
intricacy, and diversity of this Old World custom. This
inspirational and informative biography of colcha is folk art
enlivened by social history. It is a must read for those interested
in Spanish textile traditions and folk art, needlework, and New
Mexico history.
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