Mayan Delight
A long time ago, I alluded to this beautiful quilt, and promised I'd post about it at some point. Well, I'm being a hyper-super-insane bloggrasshopper lately, storing up posts as if Armageddon itself were on the way. Must be the fall coming, or perhaps I'm girding myself for some kind of cosmic shootout after which I'll be psychically indisposed for the foreseeable future. I can't tell you why I'm doing it myself, but there are 14 posts and counting on tap, and I'm still hoarding. This one is fresh, done tonight, in case it matters. I'm insane, I know, but at least I'm aware of it.On our second trip to Guatemala last February, we visited a market in the center of Guatemala City and made a beeline for the nice textile shop there that has a selection of bedpreads, shams, pillow covers and tablecloths. We didn't know quite what we wanted, but we knew we'd know it when we saw it.
I could spend days at that market. Everything's neatly folded and stacked, and when the shopkeeper pulls something out for you you get a tantalizing glimpse of the next thing, be it garment or bag or bedspread, and then you just have to see that one. I am NUTS about the Mayan aesthetic. Nuts about their colors and patterns and the way they incorporate birds and plants and flowers in their art. Nuts about the color combinations, the fabulously fine handwork, and the wildly disparate styles of each region. My favorite textiles come from around Lake Atitlan, but I love them all unreservedly. I'm more than delighted to peel off bills and give them directly to the woman who created this incomparable art. It feels like free trade as it should be. It's all I can do not to stare at the women wearing these things on the street, and I've been known to discreetly use my binoculars from the bus to appreciate the textiles they're wearing to the market and the bank. Mayan culture is alive and dominant in Guatemala, and it's one of the main reasons we love the country, troubled as it is.
To me, the people in their handmade finery look like hummingbirds, with their brilliant, iridescent gorgets.
This bedspread is pieced together from discarded huipils (wee-peels), the heavily decorated blouses that Mayan women still wear for everyday use. It's covered with neck holes from the huipils, which have been creatively patched with other pieces.
Here's a little tour around some of my favorite passages on the quilt.
Another neck hole. I think these are roses in the outer part, and on the inner ring are orchids, probably dendrobiums.

Who'd put roses with herringbone? Mayans. We couldn't even imagine such a combination. To me, huipil weavings are like nature itself--unexpected and beautiful beyond imagining. The merchants told me that many of the pieces of fabric in this quilt are no longer being produced; they're from men's dress pants that are no longer being made or worn. This quilt is holy, a piece of Mayan culture, and I feel privileged to have it on my bed, and not a little unworthy, too. It always makes me smile, just like sun on running water. And it doesn't show dog hairs at all.

This is Big Toe, my Ugly Doll. I bought him as a travel pillow, but because he, too, makes me smile. There's something comforting about taking a monster on your flight with you, sticking him in your backpack to pull out as the jet's taking off. Chet knows he is not allowed to chew Big Toe and treats him with respect. I know it's late in life to be buying dolls for myself, but there are things I find I need and cannot resist, from the ridiculous to the sublime. The wonder is the way they all fit together in my life.

Until I hoard again,
JZ
Labels: bedspread, Guatemala, huipil quilt, Mayan textiles


19 Comments:
I wish I were a hoarder. I'm a hopeless grasshopper, whipping up posts on a whim with limited time. I pull photos, think of a weak main topic and go for it, every time I post. You amaze me!
You are nuts over Mayan beauties and I am, too! They're so vibrant and rich... Collecting specialites just for yourelf is a necessity for your life. Chet understands... Good boy!
That is the most awesome quilt I have ever seen. I LOVE the brilliant colors and the way it is put together. Your little monster is cute too. Lori
From one who used to be a hand- quilter, I adore your beautiful Mayan quilt.
And your big-toe pillow goes along with it so well.
What a well-behaved doggie Chet is!
One thing that amazed me was to see the women doing their laundry. Most of the pants an huipils in your quilt were most likely washed in the rivers and streams using rocks to pound the dirt out. It is amazing they still are as vibrant as the day they were made.
Antigua is calling my name...
Shopping in Guate makes me want to bring a containerload of textiles back with me and become a defacto merchant, Dorothy.
You raise a good point, and a sad memory, Wizzie. I ruined one of my favorite bolero jackets from Guatemala when I took it to be dry cleaned. Used to being pounded on a rock in a rushing tropical stream, it cried real tears and lost half its color to the harsh chemicals and whatever dopey scrubber they used. They fuzzed it out and faded it and I will never do that to one of my treasured Mayan pieces again.I just hope Chet never throws up on this huipil quilt, because I'll have to take it down to Whipple Run and find a flat rock to beat it on, and that will make me even crankier than I am now. Ooh, what a frightening thought.
Oh. God. Thank you. I've been wondering and wondering about that quilt ever since you first mentioned it. Awestruck and breathless now that I've seen it. The hours and hours and hours of artistry that went into every inch of it is almost unimaginable. I don't know how you could possibly sleep under it though! It's so complex and intricate, you could spend many sleepless nights discovering something new everywhere you looked at it.
absolutely outclassed needlewoman,
Wendi
p.s. All that and an Ugly Doll too! Luuuuuuuurve them.
Wendi, my sista...you should go to Guate...FYI I sleep under it wearing my Nick and Nora Candy Skulls nightshirt, with a Day of the Dead theme. Looks fabbo with the busy busy quilt. Must get a pic of that soon. That and jasmine and tuberose and now Cestrum nocturnum emanating their fragrance on the nightstand. And you know, I find I work out a LOT of stuff in dreams.
I would have every Ugly Doll they make if I weren't afraid what people would think. I want one with three eyes next.
What a gorgeous work of art. We've seen glimpses of it in other posts and wondered about it. The Big Toe pillow is a hoot! At a glance I thought it was a Pokemon character.
I love your quilt, the colors are breathtaking and such wonderful workmanship, it is one of a kind, never to be replaced.
If you have time look at Nature Knitter's blog of Sept. 9th, it is about hummingbirds and is awesome.
Nature Knitter's Mom [Betty K.]
I love the juxaposition of Big Toe with the quilt! That's the essence of found art -- things that you wouldn't think would go together (like roses with herringbone), but do.
(My best friend, Patty, has the same doll, but he goes by a different name. )
Wonderful, marvelous, astounding!
I love the depth of the colours; they live!
Wow... the color is just a feast for the eyes! You can literally just stare at it and see some new part each time. Simply beautiful Julie. Love your Big Toe.
I don't about insane Julie, but you do live in your own little world, but that's alright. They know you there.
Like Mary I'm a grasshopper.
I absolutely ADORE your new photo. Had to enlarge it to make sure Charlie was definitely on your head! Oh and the quilt (huge sigh). You could paint a room any color and that quilt would look stunning in it. With just coming home yesterday to cat vomit on my bed, I just can't buy beautiful things like that anymore :-(. And you sleep under it!! My mom used to always tell me the secret to keeping a good quilt in tip top condition was to take it off the bed at night. I never really understood why though.
As for now, I'm like Mary, a grasshopper, but I try to change -
Your blog is motivation.
The quilt: it's a whole world of colour, like a million rainbows, a story-teller. I love the quilt. And the big toe looks as if he did too.
Which category does Chet belong to? Sublime or ridiculous? Maybe a little of both ...
Given that you love these Mayan textiles not just for their beautiful design but also the way they are respected and re-used, and given your own predilection for darn good story-telling, I have a feeling you'd go crazy for arpilleras -- you may want to schedule a trip to Chile or Peru. (They probably have good birds there too.)
UGH...you loved that vest! My sincerest condolences.
You could recreate the river effect with a baby pool and hose in the yard. I know how heavy that quilt is wet! You will not want to cart it to the stream. I still can see the ladies doing their laundry stretched along the edge of the river with all the colors. One of my favorite memories...well that and the pink faced warbler and hobbled goats. They goats were hobbled with old strips of the same cloth. Guatemala is fairy land.
Mega delightful!
The quilt is beautiful, but 14 hoarded posts, that's just darn amazing!
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