By J. Lazaga
BAGUIO CITY -- Within the warp and weft of our textiles are
stories as colorful as the strands, as rich as our history, and as animated as
our people. These otherwise tacit stories are what the Museo Kordilyera aims to
tell in its new exhibit titled “Handwoven Tales: The Warp and Weft of
Cordillera Textiles.”
These stories include
“Indigo blue and other dyes” which tells about the bluish-black dye produced
from the indigo plant (Indigofera tinctoria) variously called tayum by the
Ilokanos, tayum-tayum in Abra, dalum in Ifugao, and tayom in Tagalog.
These deep dark colors
common in the Cordillera include the bluish-black, nangisit (Tingguian and
Ilokano), indigo blue, sinamlan (Ga’dang) and tinanagun (Ifugao), and the
vibrant red, lagtag (Kalinga). Another story, “Bark and bent fibers,” accounts
for the earliest form of textile in the Philippines, bark cloth, the known
sources of which in the Cordillera are the pakak or sapot (Artocarus camansi),
the arandon (Wikstroemia ovate C.A. Mey.) and a shrub called armay. This story
is complemented by another, titled “Kapas and kimmayo: cotton in the
Cordillera,” which is also a story of our cotton that goes beyond Spanish
colonial history.
The story “Weaving and
the Cordillera-Ilocos link” partly explains why the Ilokanos and the Tingguians
share designs such as the binakul—specifically the kusikus (whirlwind
pattern)—and the pinili (supplementary weft designs derived from nature).
Other sections of the
exhibit feature tell about “Textiles and mathematical symmetry,” “How textiles
mean,” “Looms: turning yarns into textiles,” “Function and fashion in
contemporary textiles,” and a section with a device that allows for virtual
dressing up in traditional Cordillera attires.
The exhibit, “Handwoven
Tales,” according to Museo Kordilyera (MK) Director, Prof. Victoria Lourdes C.
Diaz, brings attention not only to the aesthetics and cultural significance of
textiles, but also to the scientific aspects of their production.
The new exhibit, which
focuses on the rich weaving tradition of the indigenous communities in the
Cordillera, was put together by a community of scholars led by Prof. Diaz, MK
Curator Analyn V. Salvador-Amores, Emeritus Professor Delfin Tolentino Jr., and
Museum Researcher Nicholai Fanged. Research inputs came from anthropology,
science, ethnomathematics, art, and history, and features the findings of the
research of the CORDITEX Project.
The technical knowledge
from a multiple of disciplines was unified to tell the significant stories in
this engaging and interactive exhibit. The exhibition was conceived, designed
and set up by the team including MK regular personnel Jhoan Medrano, Gracelyn
Angalao, Jodie Cheng, Demi Milan.
In the launching
ceremonies, Prof. Diaz acknowledged the immense assistance of various groups
and individuals who helped in mounting the exhibit, including Senator Loren
Legarda, various local community weaving groups and organizations from all over
the region, local and international museums, and the administration of UP
Baguio. The program included a fashion show of pieces utilizing Cordillera
textiles in contemporary clothing designed by Harvic Dominguez. UP Baguio
Chancellor Raymundo Rovillos, Department of Tourism Regional Director (OIC)
Jovita Gamongan, Baguio City Tourism Officer Aloysius “Alec” Mapalo” and Habi
Philippine Textile Council President Adelaida Lim led the opening of viewing of
the exhibit on Nov. 15.
With “Handwoven Tales,”
the third exhibit mounted by Museo Kordilyera since its formal opening in Jan.
2017, the museum’s mission “to cultivate an understanding of and respect for
the identity and culture of the indigenous peoples of the Cordillera and
Northern Luzon as an integral part of the evolving Filipino culture.” MK thus
resumes its regular operations to welcome the public, Tuesdays-Sundays, 09:00
a.m.-05:00 p.m. “Handwoven Tales” will run long-term.
For more information,
visit MK’s page on facebook.com/upbmuseokordilyera.
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