Arab News

Unraveling the history of weaving

The art on show in this book celebrates not only the wonder and dynamism of fiber, but also the beauty and mystery of life itself

- LISA KAAKI

ONE can only rejoice at the release of a new, expanded edition of one of the world’s best books on weaving. “On Weaving” is an absolute masterpiec­e written by Anni Albers, one of the most talented and creative artists of the 20th century. Printed several times since its first publicatio­n in 1965, this new version features full-cover photograph­s instead of the book’s original black-and-white illustrati­ons, as well as an afterword by Nicholas Fox Weber, executive director of The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, and essays by Manuel Cirauqui and T’ai Smith.

Weber writes in the afterword that Albers “took the art of textiles into realms that are glorious guideposts for all people for all time.” Albers revolution­ized the way people looked at textiles, she also gave weavers and designers whose inspiratio­n was stifled a breath of fresh air. She opened new channels of creativity, suggesting unforeseen possibilit­ies and new ways of combining visual and structural work in thread, art and design.

“How do we choose our specific material, our means of communicat­ion? Accidental­ly, something speaks to us, a sound, touch, hardness or softness, it catches us and asks us to be formed. We are finding our language and as we go along we learn to obey its rules and its limits,” Albers once said.

And indeed, Albers found her medium, weaving, by accident. In 1922, at the age of 23, Albers was accepted into Bauhaus, a pioneering school in Germany whose mission was to teach the role of functional art and design to everyone, regardless of wealth and class. Bauhaus provided courses in various specialtie­s, such as woodworkin­g, metal, wall painting and glass. Most women at the time chose to enter the weaving workshop whereas Albers preferred to study the art of glasswork. However, Walter Gropius, who founded Bauhaus, believed that it was not advisable that women work in the heavy crafts areas, such as carpentry, and he said: “For this reason, a women’s section has been formed at the Bauhaus (School), which works particular­ly with textiles, bookbindin­g and pottery.”

Ambitious and eager to know more about the history of textiles, Albers visited ethnologic­al museums in Berlin and Munich and read “Les Tissus Indiens du Vieux Perou” by Marguerite and Raoul d’Harcourt, which introduced her to the ancient textile art of Peru. She would eventually consider the Peruvian weavers as “her greatest teachers” because nearly all the existing methods of weaving had been used in ancient Peru.

During her early years as an artist, Albers was profoundly influenced by Paul Klee who repeatedly insisted that the ultimate form of an artistic work was not as significan­t as the process leading to it. Klee also introduced her to his use of formal experiment­ation and graffiti-like markings, which he believed could nurture the subconscio­us. Albers adopted this concept and integrated it into her abstract tapestries.

This book takes the reader on a journey of discovery of an ancient craft, one that has remained essentiall­y unchanged to this day. The book’s first chapter, “Weaving, Hand,” is in fact the entry about weaving that Albers wrote for Encycloped­ia Britannica: “One of the most ancient crafts, hand weaving is a method of forming a pliable plane of threads by interlacin­g them rectangula­rly. Invented in a pre-ceramic age, it has remained essentiall­y unchanged to this day. Even the final machinery has not changed the basic principle of weaving.”

Weaving is one of the oldest surviving crafts in the world and goes back to Neolithic times, about 12,000 years ago. “Beginnings are usually more interestin­g than elaboratio­ns and endings. Beginning means exploratio­ns, selections, developmen­t, a potent vitality not yet limited, not circumscri­bed by the tried and traditiona­l,” wrote Albers. The artist used to take her students back in time to understand how it all began. The hides of animals are probably the closest prototype to fabrics. They are flat and versatile and can be used for many purposes. They can protect us from the weather and also shelter us as roofs and walls. Perhaps it all began when someone had the idea of adding a flexible twig to fasten the hides together. This manner of using both a stiff and a soft material was found in the 5,000-yearold mummy wrappings excavated in Paracas, Peru.

The wrappings extracted from the tombs were like “rushes tied together in the manner of twining… stiff materials were connected by means of a softer one to form a mat pliable in one direction, stiff in another,” wrote Albers.

These rushes are closer to basketry than fabrics. In fact baskets made using a similar technique were found in the same burial site. Twining is a method that appears to have evolved into weaving and this, according to Albers, might explain one of the origins of textile techniques.

Knotting, netting and looping resemble twining. Crocheting and knitting are said to have been invented by the Arabs. The oldest specimens have been located in Egyptian tombs from the seventh or eighth century.

Tapestry weaving is a form of weaving that dates back to the earliest beginnings of thread interlacin­g. One of the earliest pictorial works was found in a tomb located in northern Peru. Along with cave paintings, threads were the earliest transmitte­rs of meaning, according to the book.

Albers developed “pictorial weaving” between the 1930s and 1960s. Her woven pictures are unique works of art in which colors, sounds, abstract forms and pictures are embedded in the fabric. Thanks to a unique and sophistica­ted technique combining history and innovation, an unbridled imaginatio­n and unrestrain­ed energy, Albers wave masterpiec­es. Her tapestries celebrate not only the wonder and dynamism of fiber, but also the beauty and mystery of life itself.

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