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Twining & Coiling ~ Exquisite Indigenous Australian Weaving

What an opportunity I had today, and in my own town of Taree. Weavers from Bula’bula Arts in Ramingining, central Arnhem Land, Northern Territory are here to teach basketry in a three day workshop. Clara Matandatpi and Marley Djangarri helped us to start weaving a basket.   

Although the weaving technique is generally called coiling and twining, it is referred to as weaving here in Australia. The weaving is so expressive and beautiful that it moves me to tears. You can feel and visualise the land and country by its colouring, shapings and textures. Meeting the makers added to my appreciation of the great richness of cultural expression held within these containers. The Manning Regional Art Gallery is exhibiting the Bula’bula weavers work which consists of coiled baskets in many shapes and handle types, twined dilly bags, twined large mats and looped string bags. There are also sculptural animal images which are delightful and surprising.

There is nothing like seeing skilled hands creating this work. I have studied lots of basket beginnings but it was something of a revelation to see how to start a basket in the ‘buttonhole’ stitch which was quite different to any technique I had read about.

We started by preparing some fresh Pandanus then moved on to starting a coiled basket base with pre natural dyed and dried pandanus. The colours of the dyes really make the work distinctive. String bag looping was fascinating and we saw Clara spin the yarn for the bag on her thigh in the traditional method.My jeans weren’t conducive to this – sadly. (see Curiousweaver May 95 – PDF for instructions on thigh spinning)

Clara and Marley are Yolngu and their Ramingining community can be seen in the film Ten Canoes

 


   

6 Comments Post a comment
  1. Beautiful! And far, far away from home… :-)

    May 19, 2008
  2. awesome bags! thanks for sharing

    May 21, 2008
  3. Lovely that you were moved by these weavers. So often, we appropriate indigenous peoples’ techniques and styles without ever encountering the people themseleves and seeing/feeling who they are — thus gaining a much richer understanding and respect for what it is that we are doing.

    Loved this post!
    Jane

    May 24, 2008
  4. The colors are soooo Australian – Ururu in the bag, as it were. I, too, love watching people make things with their hands, and when they are experienced, it’s lyrical and … like a well-executed dance, isn’t it.

    Lucky you – so which one is your basket???

    May 28, 2008
  5. Wow what a great experience and so close to home. Everybody seemed so intent on the task yet so relaxed. Thanks for the photos

    May 28, 2008
  6. WOW! Those shots are just amazing! What a fabulous post!

    June 3, 2008

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