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the MAIWA JOURNAL



the
MAIWA WRAP PARTY
includes

LIVE AUCTION 
with
27 AUCTION LOTS
(100% of final bid goes to the MAIWA FOUNDATION)

10 DOOR PRIZES
(TICKETS $3 EACH - 5 for $10)

LIVE MUSIC 
with the amazing
BOCEPHUS KING

there will be 
FOOD & WINE

7:30 pm FRIDAY OCTOBER 26th 
in the
NET LOFT, GRANVILLE ISLAND

TICKETS $10
Avilable online or 
by phone 604 669 3939 or
in the Maiwa Stores


On The Block

AUCTION LOT #1
Old teak cabinet
(value $600)

AUCTION LOT #2
Old teak mirror
(value $300)

AUCTION LOT #3
Old teak cash box
(value $250)

AUCTION LOT #4
Old teak bowl with complete Maiwa queen size bedding set: 1 - duvet cover, 1 - sheet, 2 - regular pillow cases, 2 - 24” cushions, 2 - 16” cushions
(value $540)  

AUCTION LOT #5
A complete Maiwa outfit: Badami jacket, Bengal dress, Bengal shawl, & Jawaja leather bag
(value $470)

AUCTION LOT #6
A complete Maiwa outfit: Handwoven coat, Hunza dress, Mitti tank, Bengal shawl, & Jawaja leather bag
(value $500)

AUCTION LOT #7
Old teak cabinet
(value $500)

AUCTION LOT #8
Complete Maiwa outfit: Bailou skirt, Munnar tunic, & Bengal shawl
(value $700)

AUCTION LOT #9
Jawaja wool carpet 4’ x 6’ and two Banjara cushions
(value $400)

AUCTION LOT #10
Banjara wall hanging
(value $650)

AUCTION LOT #11
Salvaged teak and iron coffee table
(value $500)

AUCTION LOT #12
Old teak Singer sewing table
(value $400)

AUCTION LOT #13
Handwoven, handstitched, indigo quilt from LIVING BLUE in Bangladesh
(value $650)

AUCTION LOT #14
Complete Maiwa Outfit: Amla silk coat, Neem silk dress, Bhunai silk skirt, Ikat shawl, & Banjara bag
(value $450)

AUCTION LOT #15
Two salvaged teak side tables
(value $300)

AUCTION LOT #16
White on white hand-stitched applique bedcover
 (value $190)

AUCTION LOT #17
DOBAG carpet 4’3” x 4’6”
 (value $1150)

AUCTION LOT #18
DOBAG kilim  3’8” x 6’8”
 (value $730)

AUCTION LOT #19
Natural Dye Workshop Binder: Contains all notes, recipes and complete range of natural dye samples on swatches of different fibers.
 (value $350 - to a dyer, invaluable)

AUCTION LOT #20
Complete Maiwa Outfit: Neem Jacket, Taj tunic, Bhunai skirt, & Bengal shawl
(value $620)

AUCTION LOT #21
Complete Maiwa Outfit: Kashmir coat, Mission dress, & Bengal shawl
(value $525)

AUCTION LOT #22
Jawaja leather travel bag (Donated by Maiwa) with an Ajrakh scarf  (Donated by Ros Aylmer) & Handcrafted Indian Textiles (Donated by Veronica Aimone)
(value $400)

AUCTION LOT #23
Maiwa bed set: 1 quilt, 1 cushion, 1 duvet, a bell, and wooden bowl
 (value $450)

AUCTION LOT #24
Teak bajot with hand carved teak printing blocks
(value $300)

AUCTION LOT #25
Teak bowl with Banjara embroidered cushions (donated by Maiwa) and an Indian embroidery book (donated by Bonie Adie)
(value $450)

AUCTION LOT #26
An original work by Janet Bolton, titled “Blue Angel Amongst the Stars.” (donated by Janet Bolton)
(value $450)

AUCTION LOT #27
Vintage Cotton Quilt and a Jawaja Leather Project Bag
(value $300)

Tuesday, October 23, 2012 No comments

Poster for the Banjara Exhibition


Tickets to the Exhibition/Lecture event. Available here.
7:30 pm in the Net Loft, Granville Island, Canada. 

The upcoming embroidery exhibition represents twelve years of concerted effort by Maiwa Handprints and the Maiwa Foundation.

The project began in western India in 1999. We located some historic pieces of embroidery in a merchant’s stall. We were told that they were made by a group known as the Banjara. Also sometimes called the Lambhani, Banjara are thought to be the ancestors of European Roma. They are nomadic but are under great pressure to settle. Many Banjara are concentrated in groups near Hyderabad and Hampi, in central India.

Banjara women visited in 2004
In 2000 and 2001 Maiwa made its first trips to try find the peoples who had made this embroidery. At the time we could encounter women in the marketplace dressed in the distinctive style. Large mirrors were set beside cowrie shells, and the ground was embroidered with red, yellow and orange threads. Geometric shapes were prominent: triangles, squares, and circles. Bags had additional cowrie shell tassels and pressed-lead ornaments.

We did not know it clearly at the time, but we were looking to establish a relationship with a Banjara group that was the equivalent of the relationship we already had with the KMVS embroiderers of the Kutch Desert in western India.

After working with the KMVS (Kutch Mahila Vikas Sangathan) co-operative for years, Maiwa mounted a large-scale exhibition of embroidered work at the Vancouver Museum. Through the Eye of a Needle: Stories from an Indian Desert was one of the best attended displays in the Museums’ history and after an extended run, the embroideries, text panels, and artifacts went on tour to other institutions. The exhibition also led to a thirty minute long documentary film and a book.

Village politics are complicated, but we knew that in order for a new project to succeed, there needed to be at least three things

The Banjara visited in 2005
1) Elder craftswomen, who are respected and who still have traditional embroidery skills. 
2) Younger craftswomen who want to learn these skills and see the value of continuing traditional work, 
3) The support of the larger cultural group i.e, the village or a cooperative.

Our method of working involved contacting a group that seemed to meet these three requirements. We would then invest in source materials for a project (threads, fabric, cloth, and mirrors) and give an advance on the completed pieces. The advance showed trust and also served to give an indication of the value of skilled work.

Contemporary business thinking does not encourage this model. A business is supposed to unload as much risk as possible onto the makers, and then squeeze them for lower prices. But we were not out to merely run a business. We were determined to encourage a system that would see the continuation of one of the most impressive embroidery traditions in the world.

Traditional dress and adornment.

Our search for a group to work with continued for five more years.

In 2004, as part of the very first Maiwa Symposium, we partnered with Vancouver chef John Bishop to hold the “Genius of Origins” event. The combination fashion show, sit-down diner was an ambitious fundraiser for the Maiwa Foundation. It was a success. It was also the first time the Banjara cultural group was clearly identified as an ongoing project for both Maiwa and the Maiwa Foundation.

We returned to India villages in 2005 and again in 2006. We investigated co-operatives and NGOs that might be able to provide on-the-ground support.

Meena demonstrates a stitch.
In 2006 we brought Meena Raste with us. Meena was our main contact at KMVS and it was with Meena that we worked to produce the Vancouver Museum exhibition, Through the Eye of a Needle.

India in 2006 was experiencing an economic boom. The price of real-estate was on the rise and many people in rural areas were being encouraged to sell what they had to developers. The sudden wealth meant that there was little interest in developing embroidery for income generation.

Over the next few years we experienced a number of disappointments, but we did not give up hope. During this time we saw the supply of traditional Banjara embroidery slowly disappear from the markets. The quality of pieces went down as the prices went up. What might have started out as a larger piece of embroidery was often cut up and sold, sometimes as a fragment, and sometimes remade into a bag or cushion.

One day the break we were waiting for came in the form of a message from Meena.

In 2008 Meena told us that an “unusual couple” had founded a trust to preserve Banjara Embroidery. The couple, a French man and a woman from the Banjara community, lived near Hampi in central India. It would not be easy to get there to visit, but they seemed dedicated. The founders were Jan and Laxmi Duclos and together they ran the Surya Lambhani-Banjara Women’s Welfare Trust or Surya's Garden.

Our first contact with them came in the mail. Jan wrote to us in an elegant longhand telling us about the project, explaining the difficulties they faced and strongly encouraging us to visit.

Laxmi in 2009
In 2009, Maiwa made the decision to see the author of the hand-written letters. Charllotte Kwon and Shirley Gordon, made the drive from Goa to Hampi. On a map Goa and Hampi are fairly close. The trip should have been 5 hours – but it lasted 17. This only afforded a short visit with Jan and Laxmi. After that first contact Charllotte Kwon called Vancouver, “We may just have found the group that we’ve been looking for.” she said, trying hard to curb her enthusiasm – trying hard not to be too hopeful after so many disappointments.

That 2009 visit, did not take place in isolation. On that same trip to India, the Maiwa Foundation conducted a week-long natural dye workshop in Assam. Charllotte had just finished conducting a 21-day tour to visit artisans. The tour covered almost the entire north of India from Kutch, to Bengal. There were also many other stops to visit blockprinters, dyers and the Jawaja leatherworkers.

We decided we wanted to work with the group. Now it was simply a matter logistics, designs, sizes, backing fabrics, embroidery threads, timelines, and of course, costing. Maybe to facilitate this new project we didn’t need another Meena, maybe what we needed was Meena herself.

Talking stitches on the porch of Surya's Garden, Hampi.
In 2011 the Maiwa Foundation had just completed a Masterclass workshop held in Bengal. Meena was a participant and so we arranged to regroup in Hampi. We had a substantial team together and we took full advantage of our visit. Meena assisted the group with costing estimates and several options for backing materials. After much discussion it was agreed that KMVS and Surya’s garden could work together. KMVS could supply tailoring expertise and finish the works that Laxmi and Jan’s group had made.

This was a leap of faith for everyone. It is no small thing to pack up pieces that had each taken many months to stitch, and ship them out to strangers in the hopes that they would complete them.

The results of this partnership arrived at Maiwa in September of 2012. Twelve years had passed between the conception of this project and the arrival of the first completed piece.

You are present at an historic moment in craft. Nowhere on earth will you find contemporary Banjara embroidery of this caliber. You are present at the beginning. The beginning of the revival.


Friday, October 19, 2012 2 comments
Stylist Sibella Court fields question at the "Still Life with Stylist" Lecture

Last night the Net Loft was sold out as Sibella Court presented some insight into her nature as a bowerbird. North american audiences might not know this bird, but it is famous for its habit of collecting objects of a particular colour. Different types of bowerbird will collect different colours. It is also the title of her latest title (available in our stores, or by phone, not yet available online). We have managed to get Canadian distribution rights to Sibella's books (no easy task). We now have all her books in stock ".etc" should be arriving in the next few days. Please visit our store or call 604 669 3939 to get your copy.

The cover Sibella Court's latest book.
The Vancouver audience gave Sibella a warm reception and we were proud to be the hosts of her Canadian Debut. Sibella, who has an insatiable desire to collect objects with character, said that often visitors to her store The Society Inc. point to it (and her books) as a kind of licence to hold onto their own stacks of ephemera. "Even in my own space," Sibella said, "my staff sometimes think we need to clean up and trim down a bit. But the next time that they say that, I'm going to show them a photo of the Maiwa Loft."



October 15th was a journey through the textile art of Barbara Shapiro. The audience followed the many branches of her remarkable career as it went from traditional two-dimentional weavings into three-dimensional forms. Chief among these have been baskets and her repairs to hand-turned wooden vessels. After a pivotal meeting with Michel Garcia in 2008, Barbara has also developed a "greener indigo" technique which she has used to great effect in her work.

Barbara Shapiro speaking at her lecture "Change is Good."



October 10th was a chance to see a Maiwa event up on the big Marquee ...

Blue Alchemy up on the marquee at Fifth Avenue Cinemas.

Mary Lance's indigo documentary BLUE ALCHEMY had its British Columbia premier at the Fifth Avenue Cinemas. There were glasses of wine (like all the Maiwa events) and popcorn. Mary answered questions about making of the film. She felt as if she had come full circle for the screening, as the work on her documentary began with an interview of Jenny Balfour-Paul in Charllotte Kwon's living room during the 2005 Maiwa Textile Symposium.

Thursday, October 18, 2012 No comments



Maiwa Textile Symposium
presents:
 an exhibition of the best contemporary Banjara embroidery being done today.

BANJARA EMBROIDERY

EXHIBIT and LECTURE


Jan and Laxmi Duclos run the
Surya’s Lambhani Women Welfare Trust
(Surya’s Garden) in Hampi, India.
Together they are reviving some of India's
most distinctive embroidery.

7:30 pm
Saturday October 20
The NetLoft, Granville Island, Canada

Tickets available online
by phone 604 669 3939
at the Maiwa Stores
or at the door.

There are also two opportunities to take the
BANJARA EMBROIDERY WORKSHOP

October 19, 20 (Fri, Sat) 10am–4pm

October 21, 22 (Sun, Mon) 10am–4pm

click on the above links for full details and registration.


Monday, October 15, 2012 No comments

On Monday October 15 we welcome Barbara Shapiro to take the podium as the 6th presenter in our lecture series. Barbara is one of the most sought-after speakers in the textile arts today. A glance at her website http://barbara-shapiro.com/ reveals the depth of her experience as a textile artist, writer and educator. 

Barbara will present her lecture "Change is Good" Tickets are available online:

Barbara Shapiro
Change is Good

Monday October 15
7:30 pm
Netloft, Granville Island, Vancouver Canada
Friday, October 12, 2012 No comments

Maiwa Textile Symposium 
presents:
 a special premier of the documentary film

BLUE ALCHEMY
with director 
MARY LANCE

to introduce the film and participate in a 
question and answer session after the film.

5th Ave. Cinemas
2110 Burrard St.
7:30 pm
Wednesday October 10

Tickets available online
by phone 604 669 3939
at the Maiwa Stores
or at the door.

Experience the magic and transformative power of the world's most famous blue.


Monday, October 08, 2012 No comments

One of the many talented staff at Maiwa is Tim McLaughlin who does much of our graphic design and contributes to our archive of photography. He would like to invite the Maiwa audience to a launch of a personal project - his first exhibition of black and white portraits.

There will be an opening reception this Saturday October 6th from 7- 9pm. We would love to see you there.

Melriches Coffee House
1244 Davie Street, Vancouver, Canada

The exhibit will remain up for the month of October.

More information on the portrait project may be found at
http://ampersand-and-company.com/ 
Thursday, October 04, 2012 No comments

Do you have an urge to document textiles, fibers, craft techniques, or even your own projects? Are you curious how making a visual record turns into a documentary?
This is a rare opportunity to work directly with American Documentary Filmmaker Mary Lance.

During this three-hour workshop students will learn:
1) How a documentary project begins: Knowing the difference between a subject that interests you and one that you will spend years exploring.
2) How the project moves from inspiration to production: Development, research, finding people and locations, shooting.
3) How the story develops and comes to life in editing.

$75
Maiwa Loft, Granille Island, Vancouver

October 11 (Thu) MORNING 10am-1pm - class limit 18
October 11 (Thu) AFTERNOON 2am-5pm - class limit 18

Mary Lance is an award-winning filmmaker with more than 25 years’ experience in documentaries. Her film Agnes Martin: With My Back to the World has been shown widely in the USA and abroad. Diego Rivera: I Paint What I See was awarded a jury prize at the Biennial of Films on Art at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, a Gold Plaque at the Chicago International Film Festival, and other awards. Her newest release, Blue Alchemy: Stories of Indigo, is being screened at Fifth Avenue Cinema on October 10.

Monday, October 01, 2012 No comments
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      • 2012 WRAP PARTY + LIVE AUCTION
      • An Exhibit Twelve Years in the Making
      • Reviews: Sibella Court, Barbara Shapiro, Blue Alchemy
      • The Banjara Come to Vancouver
      • Featured Lecture: Change is Good
      • Indigo on the Big Screen - Blue Alchemy
      • Maiwa Related - Photography Exhibition Opening
      • Featured Workshop: Filming the World
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