> DESCRIPTION
In a world awash in a global trade of industrially produced cottons and
synthetic fabrics, it is easy to forget that all of the cloth needed in
any community once had to be woven by hand and that much of it was made
from bast or leaf fibers. Today even the word
bast, which refers to a layer of fibers found in the stems of plants, is unfamiliar to many people.
Bast and leaf fibers are notoriously difficult to process and weave
into cloth, yet weavers around the world have learned to capitalize on
the materials’ subtle natural beauty and to manipulate complicated and
demanding dye procedures to great effect. In Material Choices,
see an unusual array of garments and more made of these challenging
fibers, explore their significant use in the Pacific, and examine the
current state of many bast and leaf fiber weaving traditions that
nearly became extinct in the mid-20th century but have now undergone a
revival.
Fiber Use in the Pacific
The exhibition next focuses on the Pacific region and considers
the relationships between cloth produced on looms and items made with
various other techniques including plaiting, twining, and looping.
Scholars have long recognized the crucial roles that loom-woven cloth
plays in ceremony and society, especially in Southeast Asia, as markers
of wealth, heritage, and position. As Austronesian peoples settled the
Pacific from Southeast Asia, they carried these ideas with them.
Wherever looms are found in the Pacific, they are closely related to
Southeast Asian body-tension looms, and they are used exclusively for
bast and leaf fibers (primarily hibiscus and banana).
The loom, however, never spread far into the Pacific, and in
many parts of Oceania bast or leaf fiber clothing had to be made
without this useful piece of equipment. Some striking examples on
display include a cloak and skirt twined by hand by Maori women from
fibers of the New Zealand flax plant and a hand-plaited pandanus leaf
mat from Samoa, so delicate that it can be worn as a garment. Two
so-called “grass” skirts, one from the Trobriand Islands and another
from Tuvalu, actually prove to be complex assemblages involving diverse
plant materials, but no grass! A complete suit of armor made of coconut
fiber from Kiribati and a life-sized crocodile figure constructed
entirely of looped bast fiber from the Sepik River in New Guinea
demonstrate the impressive sculptural possibilities of these non-loom
technologies.
Revival on the Brink of Extinction
Over the course of the twentieth century, hand weaving ceased to
be an economically significant activity in most parts of the world due
primarily to the industrialization of textile production, the invention
of man-made fibers, and the advent of global cloth trade on a massive
scale. Even where handlooms continued to operate, weavers typically
abandoned bast and leaf fibers produced from local fields and forests
in favor of industrially produced cotton or synthetic yarns. By the
1970s, it seemed that the last remaining traditions of bast or leaf
fiber hand weaving would be doomed to history.
It is rather remarkable, then, that the first decade of the
twenty-first century has found hand-weaving of bast and leaf fibers not
only surviving in some communities, but in some cases even thriving
under newly globalized conditions. The last section of ‘Material
Choices’ examines the current state of traditions in Japan’s famed
“snow country” and the Ryukyu Islands, the Philippines, Vietnam,
Borneo, and Micronesia that nearly became extinct in the mid-20th
century but have now undergone a revival.
The exhibition is punctuated by a selection of rare botanical
prints and books on loan from UCLA’s Louise M. Darling Biomedical
Library and UC Berkeley’s Bancroft Library, which provide visitors with
a look at the source of these fibers through beautiful drawings of
hemp, banana, flax, pandanus, pineapple, paper mulberry, and lemba.
Field photographs of weavers, and of their products in use, offer more
context for understanding bast and leaf fiber uses.
Additional Information
‘Material Choices’ is curated by Roy Hamilton, curator of Asian
and Pacific Collections, the Fowler Museum at UCLA. The accompanying
book, co-edited by Hamilton and B. Lynne Milgram, is being published by
the Fowler Museum, Material Choices: Refashioning Bast and Leaf Fibers
in Asia and the Pacific (ISBN: 978-09748729-8-8 soft cover). This
exhibition is made possible through the support of the Getty
Foundation, R. L. Shep Endowment Fund, UC Pacific Rim Research Program,
Asian Cultural Council, Fowler Museum Textile Council, and Manus, the
support group of the Fowler Museum.
The Fowler is open Wednesdays through Sundays, from noon to 5
p.m.; and on Thursdays, from noon until 8 p.m. The museum is closed
Mondays and Tuesdays. The Fowler Museum, part of UCLA’s School of the
Arts and Architecture, is located in the north part of the UCLA campus.
Admission is free. Parking is available for a maximum of $8 in Lot 4.
For more information, the public may call (310) 825-4361 or visit
fowler.ucla.edu.
Related Programs
Opening Day, Sun., Aug. 26, 2007
Galleries open 12–5 pm
1–4 pm Kids in the Courtyard: Raffia, Ribbons, and Rainbows
Weave
yourself a rainbow at this drop-in workshop for families. Over/under,
up/down, create a multicolored mat or tapestry using simple techniques.
1 pm and 3 pm Exhibition Tours
Explore ‘Material
Choices’ with curator Roy Hamilton and B. Lynne Milgram, co-editor of
the exhibition’s accompanying publication.
4 pm Summer Sunset Concert: Lion of Panjshir
Close out your summer with a show of psychedelic folk rock, influenced by traditional Afghan music.
6 pm Members’ Reception with Lion of Panjshir at the W Los Angeles-Westwood
Fowler
members are invited to the W Los Angeles-Westwood for a poolside
reception featuring cocktails and light appetizers. Space limited;
reservations required. RSVP by August 17: 310/206-0306 or
fowlermembership@arts.ucla.edu
Sun., Sept. 16, 2007 2 pm
Lecture: A Weaver's Perspective: An Insider’s Look at Japanese Bast Fiber Textiles
Melissa
M. Rinne, assistant curator of Japanese Art at the Asian Art Museum of
San Francisco, examines the tradition of bast fiber textiles in Japan
as well as present-day efforts to sustain the craft in contemporary
times.
Made possible through the support of the Getty
Foundation, R. L. Shep Endowment Fund, UC Pacific Rim Research Program,
Asian Cultural Council, Fowler Museum Textile Council, and Manus, the
support group of the Fowler Museum.