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A Modern Twist On Mexican Tradition Hits The Runway

(Left) Mayan artisans from the Yucatan region hand-embroidered an armadillo onto this linen dress from Carla Fernández's Mayalands collection. (Right) This Fernandez dress is a traditional rebozo shape which honors the square root design of ancient patterns.
Ramiro Chaves/Courtesy Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
(Left) Mayan artisans from the Yucatan region hand-embroidered an armadillo onto this linen dress from Carla Fernández's Mayalands collection. (Right) This Fernandez dress is a traditional rebozo shape which honors the square root design of ancient patterns.

In a small shed in Tenancingo, Mexico, partly open to the sky, about a half-dozen men stand behind huge wooden looms. They pedal side-by-side, their churning feet making a beautiful harmony as they craft handmade rebozos.

Rebozos, long rectangular shawls that came into style in Mexico in the 16th century, and the huipil, a woven and embroidered blouse or dress of pre-Columbian origin, are the main elements of Mexican traditional dress.

Today rebozos and huipiles bridge the past and future of Mexican garments. They're being reinterpreted by designers like Carla Fernández, who takes these handmade textiles and manipulates them into something contemporary.

The tiny rural workshop in Tenancingo represents one thread of Fernández's elaborate supply chain, one that loops from Mexico's plains and mountains to runways in Tokyo and Amsterdam.

A Few Cuts, Then Transformation

On a visit to the weavers, the designer unfurls a blue-and-white fringed rebozo, intricately loomed into a tight herringbone pattern. It's nearly 8 feet long.

Enrique Antonio Tinoco Jaimes crafts a <em>rebozo</em> on a traditional loom in the <em>rebozo</em> workshop of Don Fermín Escobar in Tenancingo, Mexico. At right, a detail from a <em>rebozo</em>.
Eunice Adorno/Sarah Tilotta / Courtesy Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum/NPR
/
Courtesy Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum/NPR
Enrique Antonio Tinoco Jaimes crafts a rebozo on a traditional loom in the rebozo workshop of Don Fermín Escobar in Tenancingo, Mexico. At right, a detail from a rebozo.

"We just make these cuts, and put these two sleeves," Fernández explains. "And you can use it as a vest, and then you can turn it upside down and you will see it becomes more a blouse or a sweater."

On the body, it's chic, sculptural, edgy — but laid flat, the finished garment keeps its traditional rectangular shape.

Fernández leaves the fringes of the rebozo intact, she says, "so you can actually see that this is all handmade."

In fact, the rebozo is one of the most labor-intensive garments on earth. Before any looming begins, the threads are wrapped with thousands of knots and dyed, then the knots are removed — a process known as ikat.

Mexico's rich, raw fabrics — cotton, shaggy sheep's wool or even rough ixtle from agave fiber — attracted Fernández as a teenager. Indigenous women in remote villages wore these fabrics themselves — but the ones they sold weren't as elaborate.

"I used to tell them, 'No, I don't want this huipil, I want one like the one you are wearing,' " Fernández says.

Mexican designer Carla Fernández visits a rebozo workshop in Tenancingo, Mexico. In her work, she uses fabrics made by weavers from across Mexico. The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston is exhibiting Fernández's pieces this summer.
/ Eunice Adorno courtesy of Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
/
Eunice Adorno courtesy of Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Mexican designer Carla Fernández visits a rebozo workshop in Tenancingo, Mexico. In her work, she uses fabrics made by weavers from across Mexico. The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston is exhibiting Fernández's pieces this summer.

Now 41, Fernández travels constantly to collaborate with indigenous weavers throughout Mexico, offering special workshops where weavers can develop new skills or learn to market old ones.

Protecting A Heritage Of Storytelling And History

Hundreds of miles away from the rebozo workshop, in the mountains of northern Oaxaca, Fernández has been invited to the city of Tuxtepec to see if local weavers want to become her suppliers.

The weavers here are women with long braids, wearing bright red huipiles. Some of them speak only a tonal dialect of the Chinantec language as they demonstrate a backstrap loom, which ties around the waist to a pole.

Their huipiles are woven with symbols, like trees of life or creation myths of light and darkness. Traditionally, indigenous weaving tells a story.

There's so much cultural significance attached to these garments that issues of historic racism and exploitation can't help but come up. Marta Xucunostli, a 34-year-old local activist, says that she was initially skeptical about designers like Fernández coming into indigenous areas like hers to work with weavers.

"At the beginning ... I was like, 'Who is this designer who is coming?' Because as communities we protect ourselves," Xucunostli says. "Like back in the times of the conquerors ... giving a mirror and doing some not-fair trade."

Xucunostli says she Googled Fernández carefully. Her caution comes from centuries of exploitation. Anthropologist Marta Turok, who specializes in Mexican textiles and helped Fernández establish fair-trade practices, can understand.

"To be an Indian is to be at the lowest link in the chain," she says.

'The Next Thing You Know ... Goodbye, Braids'

The role of weaving in communities is changing. When Turok began her research decades ago, nearly all indigenous women wore huipiles.

As more and more children assimilated and went to school, however, plaid skirts and acrylic sweaters became mandatory.

"And the next thing you know ... goodbye, braids," Turok says. "Do you think that young girl is ever going to wear a huipil? Probably not."

Since the Zapatista rebellion in the 1990s, the Mexican government has made some attempts at reform, including recognition of indigenous cultures.

Turok says a critical concern in seeking new markets is whether it compromises the heritage of the artisans.

"Once the designers came in, or the non-profits, or even the government, you created a system of dependency. The artisans became dependent on a third person," Turok says.

"That third person could control the raw material and say, 'Here, I'll give you the raw material and I'll just pay you for your labor,' " she says. "So one of the questions is: Who is in control of the production?"

Making Contacts, Placing Orders

Fernández's answer to this question lies farther into the region called Chinantla. The road into the mountains passes cool green groves of vanilla bean orchards and trees laden with mangos.

Fernández is on her way to meet another group of artisans — women she's not yet sure if she'll be able to work with.

"We will try," Fernández says. "This trip is very important to us because we'll have the contacts of the weavers — and then we will get back to the city and reach them through email, through phones, and then we'll know exactly what we can propose."

In the tiny community of San Pedro Ixcatlán, Fernández's car pulls up outside the hilltop home of Rosina Sarmiento, a 65-year-old artisan.

Inside, Sarmiento opens a cabinet overflowing with bright, beautifully embroidered fabrics created in the Mazateca style.

They're covered in birds and flowers. Fernández checks out bedspreads and tablecloths, holding them up against her body.

Weavers make <em>huipiles</em>, a detail of which can be seen at right. <em>Huipiles</em> have been worn by indigenous women in Mexico and Central America since before the era of Spanish colonialism.
Eunice Adorno / Courtesy Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
/
Courtesy Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Weavers make huipiles, a detail of which can be seen at right. Huipiles have been worn by indigenous women in Mexico and Central America since before the era of Spanish colonialism.

"The embroidery is so fine that it looks painted," Fernández says. "If you see it from far away, you don't know if it's a print. And then you come very close and then you see that it's amazingly embroidered."

If Sarmiento decides she'd like to work with Fernández, Fernández will pay half up front and half on delivery. Ultimately, one of Sarmiento's hand-embroidered flowers or parrots might end up on shawls, ponchos or dresses in one of Fernández's two Mexico City boutiques.

Old Traditions, New Versatility

Fernández is prepared for another question as well: Is this use of indigenous weaving traditional? "What [the weavers] do for the tourists is not traditional, either, you know?" Fernández says. "These are the communities that want to do new designs — those are the ones we work with."

Increasingly, younger indigenous women wielding cell phones and business cards seem happy to have their handiwork on the world stage.

"They know how to do backstrap loom. Who in the world, like young people, know[s] how to do backstrap loom? Very few," Fernández says. "But it's something that makes you very unique, like those things that your grandparents taught you. I think the new generations are pretty into it."

To the left is a fiesta huipil<em> </em>from northern Oaxaca. Carla Fernandez recently visited the region to look for fabrics she might use in future designs; at right, a Quetzalcoatl feathered-serpent fiesta huipil worn by a weaver in San Lucas Ojitlan.
/ Eunice Adorno/Courtesy of Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
/
Eunice Adorno/Courtesy of Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
To the left is a fiesta huipil from northern Oaxaca. Carla Fernandez recently visited the region to look for fabrics she might use in future designs; at right, a Quetzalcoatl feathered-serpent fiesta huipil worn by a weaver in San Lucas Ojitlan.

Milagros Ortega, 27, is part of the next generation, and a full-time weaver. A backstrap loom of red thread is strung across the patio at her home in San Lucas Ojitlán. She and her fellow weavers won't hesitate to try new things for Fernández, she says, but she won't stop weaving huipiles for herself.

"We would never let anything change this," she says, "because these are our roots." Their roots, their history and their heritage.

You can see Fernández's designs, featuring the work of weavers from across Mexico, at an exhibit this summer at Boston's Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. The show is called "Carla Fernández: The Barefoot Designer," and Fernández herself will give a workshop in August.

Cecilia Gomez Diaz, a young weaver from Chiapas, will also be teaching at the museum this summer.

"When I weave, I think how each person represents, to me, a human in the universe," Diaz says. "There are as many humans as threads — there is no end."

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Longtime listeners recognize Jacki Lyden's voice from her frequent work as a substitute host on NPR. As a journalist who has been with NPR since 1979, Lyden regards herself first and foremost as a storyteller and looks for the distinctive human voice in a huge range of national and international stories. She is the current Weekend All Things Considered host.
Jacki Lyden
Longtime listeners recognize Jacki Lyden's voice from her frequent work as a substitute host on NPR. As a journalist who has been with NPR since 1979, Lyden regards herself first and foremost as a storyteller and looks for the distinctive human voice in a huge range of national and international stories.