Friday, 30 July 2010

New address for our website – adireafricantextiles.com

0004 Unique early C20th man’s wrap from Bondoukou region, Cote D’Ivoire. Image © Duncan Clarke

After almost 15 years online our old web address at adire.clara.net will no longer function. Over the past ten days I have transferred the entire site to www.adireafricantextiles.com . Please revise any bookmarks or links you have been kind enough to make to the site. Any of you who have not yet seen our online galleries of vintage African textiles and associated information resources are invited to take a look and we welcome any comments.

Thursday, 1 July 2010

“Under African Skies” – quilting exhibition in York

A Quilt and Textile Exhibition curated by Magie Relph for The Quilt Museum and Gallery in York, 10 July to 16 October 2010 – features quilts made from and inspired by African fabrics.

african_odyssey_3_200

“African Odyssey III by Janice Gunner, UK. This quilt was inspired by a present from Magie Relph - a piece of Indigo and kola nut fabric with a large tied circular motif in the centre. I just had to use it in a quilt, but I needed more fabrics to go with it. Another collection was born! Machine pieced, hand and machine quilted. Cotton and polyester wadding. Cotton, rayon invisible and metallic threads. 121 x 100 cm “

More information here

Tuesday, 29 June 2010

Updates on our website today – vintage Yoruba textiles

Click pictures for description and larger view.

C19th indigo cotton and magenta silk

Asooke365

Very rare C19th woman’s wrapper cloth

Asooke361

Unique design, mid-C20th wrapper

Asooke362

Natural beige wild silk

Asooke367

Circa 1900 mixed strip hand spun cotton & indigo

Asooke347

Sunday, 6 June 2010

Wearing African Textiles – part one of an occasional series

caboverde cvp03
Vintage postcard, circa 1920s – “Costume, S. Vincente, Cabo Verde.” Vintage indigo dyed textile, pano cha, circa 1920-50, Cabo Verde.

Click on the photos to enlarge – please do not reproduce without permission.

Monday, 31 May 2010

A Wolof weaver on Goree island, 1844

arc127_tisserand_001f

Although this sketch in the French National Archives is not the earliest depiction of a West African weaver it is exceptionally detailed and clear for a nineteenth century source. It was drawn by Isidore Hedde (1801-1880) a ribbon manufacturer from St. Etienne whose boat paused in Senegal on route to China as part of a French diplomatic mission. Undoubtedly Hedde’s own background in weaving contributed to the attention he paid to depicting the key loom components. The weaver is described as a slave and griot, although it seems likely, to me at least, that “slave” is Hedde’s gloss on the complex and anomalous status of weavers and other craftspeople in Senegambian societies. The drawing is accompanied by an important letter that describes at some length his observations on textile production in Goree at that date, including the surprising fact that there were 114 weavers on the small island. Click here to see more details.

By way of comparison, here is a Senegalese weaver depicted on an old postcard, dating from about 1905, by Charles Fortier (author’s collection.)

fortier weaver

Thursday, 27 May 2010

Fante Asafo Flags at Christie’s Paris, June 15th.

d5328017l LOT 60, SALE 5599, PARIS
Estimate: €4,000 - €6,000
($4,922 - $7,383)
d5328018l LOT 61, SALE 5599, PARIS
Estimate:€4,000 - €6,000
($4,922 - $7,383)
d5328019l LOT 62, SALE 5599, PARIS
Estimate: €4,000 - €6,000
($4,922 - $7,383)

Featuring these three flags from a major European collection, this sale will be an important test of interest in Asafo flags at a major auction house after the new and dramatically higher prices they realised at Sotheby’s in the McAlpine Collection auctions in 2006 and 2007.

Friday, 14 May 2010

Weaving Dreams: Tracing Cotton and Fashion in Africa

An interesting video by Amanda Martinez traces links between African fashion designers, the struggles of the Malian cotton industry and excessive US subsidies to American cotton growers.

Featured in the video is the remarkable Malian designer and activist Awa Meite much of whose work involves exploring the design possibilities of local cotton and Mali’s ancient textile traditions. Awa’a website is here .