ENTWINED- COLORANTS (Essay Series: Natural Heritage and Basketry)

Page 1

ENTWINED

COLORANTS Essay Series: Natural Heritage and Basketry


When Pottery Barn, an international furniture shop, features a winnowing tray as a centerpiece, (yes, that bilâo which costs a whopping 15,000 pesos) it shows how local materials are seen as resourceful organic art in other parts of the world. Imagine how something utilitarian in the lives of the Filipinos can be treated as art, hung on the wall, and displayed to be admired. But that is precisely what is happening, now that their use has relatively dwindled in our everyday lives. How often do the people who buy their rice in the giant supermarkets actually use the bilâo? When was the last time we've actually used one? Do we even have the skills to make these baskets? In many ways, these organic materials have become a craft that showcases a cultural practice long past (just a friendly reminder that the 1980s was 40 years ago!). These wickers are still around, woven by master craftspeople whose knowledge and skills are being replaced by other common materials, primarily plastics. In this case, what was once an essential skill to survive has changed to become marketable artistic products. And like any craftspeople, basic knowledge of their materials—in this case, their environment and the plants they bear—is fundamental to their knowledge. Like anything that takes time, plants and people are entwined to produce skills and knowledge that is passed down through generations.

Man weaving a woman’s basket for carrying rice¹

The design on this ubo is achieved by smoking the rattan to produce the dark-brown or black colour.²

The traditional basket is typically thought to take on the color of the material that makes it. However, basket makers have cleverly managed to integrate various designs into their product and make them more eye-catching. While dyes and plastics quickly become more integrated into basket-making, various groups in the Philippines still maintain their traditional practices of using colors for their work. This is shared with the mat-making practice or the traditional baníg where the weavers may use the same types of plants for their final products. The eye-catching plants can certainly sway the buyers through the striking designs woven by the basket-makers. In 1913, Parker already identified that there are three ways that basket makers put colorful designs on their products, and that was through staining or smoking, coloring or dyeing, or through the interweaving of the strips to form geometric patterns.

¹Kaj Birket-Smith, Man weaving a woman’s basket for carrying rice, 1952, in The Rice Cultivation and Rice-harvest Feast of the Bontoc Igorot (Vol. 32, Historisk-filologiske Meddelelser. Copenhagen, Denmark: I kommission hos Ejnar Munksgaard), Plate 4, Fig. 9. ² Museo ng Nayong Pilipino Instgaram Account, Ubo from the Manobo, 2021, digital image, Nayong Pilipino Foundation Ethnographic Collection, Manila, accessed June 4, 2021, https://www.instagram.com/p/COzr5WsheDF/.

@nayongpilipino.museo

The Natural Colorants of Baskets

1


This is definitely true in several groups, who achieve strikingly geometric weaves through intertwining different colors of the f vine (Lysodium sp.) such as the Mangyan of Mindoro. By coiling the nitu with the buri, the various Mangyan groups produce a dramatic style of dark against light colors that are intrinsic to the design choice of the groups. Other communities may achieve a similar effect, but distinctly different from the weave and color combinations provided by the Mangyan's patterns. This certainly upholds their identity as masters of producing varied designs through plant weave. These different techniques, all achieved with the use of plants, shows how the master basket weavers take advantage of their environment. This skill of learning the exact use of plants as colorant and how they will interact with the strips of baskets to produce a pattern of art and identity shows how their indigenous skills weave together scientific knowledge and artistic expertise. This holistic view of the environment shows that for many of the basket makers, knowledge of nature and cultural practices are interwoven to produce the perfect combination of science and art.

@nayongpilipino.museo

Knowing the hundreds of varieties of baskets throughout the Philippines helps us appreciate the skills and scientific knowledge of the people, honed primarily by their observation and practice. Aside from being tradespeople dedicated to their craft, they are true scientists by weaving information on flora and applying them to an end product. This skill is particularly honed by continuous practice and experience perfected with the help of generational knowledge passed down through centuries. Baskets produced by these experts show how they critically entwine the discipline of understanding plant anatomy and characteristics to produce beautiful and soothing art. Basket art not only deserves to be placed on a wall to be admired, but art that is used and relevant to our culture, identity, and daily lives.

3


Bibliography Calderon, Mary Jane. "The Basketry of the Batak." Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 14, no. 2 (1986), 128-136. Novellino, Dario. "FROM MUSEUM COLLECTIONS TO FIELD RESEARCH* An ethno graphic account of Batak basket-weaving knowledge, Palawan island, Philippines." Indone sia and the Malay World 37, no. 108 (May 2009), 203-224. doi:10.1080/13639810902979404.

@nayongpilipino.museo

Silvestre, Ramon Eriberto Jader. "The ethnoarchaeology of Kalinga basketry: When men weave baskets and women make pots." PhD diss., Department of Archaeology, The University of Arizona, 2000.

4


MUSEO NG NAYONG PILIPINO PROJECT

HERITAGE SPACE PROGRAM

Patricia Cecille Monica H. Panganiban Project Head/ Conservator

Laya Boquiren-Gonzales Program Head

Anna Carla Pineda Senior collections Researcher

Tamara Kriss L. Bañez Project Officer/ Researcher

Renz Lauren S. Santos Digital Archivist

Miguel Angelo Medina Multimedia Artist

Essie Loise F. Dela Cruz Collections Assistant Princess Mhay V. Hernandez Collections Assistant

Ian Paulo O. Mejia Project Development Officer III Ian Clay R. Alay-ay Inventory Support/Programs Assistant John Alfred David Inventory Support/ Programs Assistant

@nayongpilipino.museo

PROGRAMS UNIT

Lalaine M. Javier Inventory Support/ Programs Assistant Josephine Bragais Inventory Support/Programs Assistant

5


Nayong Pilipino

nayongpilipino.gov.ph @nayongpilipino.museo


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.