The following is the PowerPoint that I had presented to my fellow peers and thesis advisors.
It is a more visually way of presenting my thesis, and I think it will be more helpful to my audience to see the direction in which I intend to take this collection.
It is a more visually way of presenting my thesis, and I think it will be more helpful to my audience to see the direction in which I intend to take this collection.
Senator
Nikki M.L. Coseteng from
the Philippines stated, “In this world, only those who have a strong sense of
who they are, can insist on their own terms. Only those that can value their
real nature can exercise power over global forces” (Pastor-Roces, 3).
I have come to the realization that in order to have a strong sense of who I
truly am, I must learn more about my heritage and only then will I be able to
express myself and to find my identity
Jose Rizal,
is considered the greatest national hero of the Philippines, and he is where I
started my research, unknowingly and
subconsciously and thats where I began exploring who I am, and my
culture.
Traditional filipino
garments are the Barong, maria clara
dress, and the terno
which evolved from the maria clara
dress
For
this project, I decided to combine all three garments by creating a Barong
inspired shirt with the butterfly sleeves from a terno, and a saya
with a sash inspired by a tapis from the Maria Clara gown.
“ang paglisan sa tahanang sinilangan at nilakihan ay higit pa kaysa kung malawa ang kalahati ng sariling pagkatao” jose rizal Noli me Tangere
Basically means,
where we come from is what forms our being;
When you
leave your homeland, where you grew up you lose more than half of yourself
The importance
of Joze
Rizal’s Noli Me Tangere (latin for touch me not) to
Philippine history is, it jump started the Philippine revolution against the
Spanish government. He’s still seen as a hero even after his death (“Jose
Rizal”). This novel essentially portrays the story of Juan Crisostomo
Ibarra y Magsalin, a
young Filipino man who was studying abroad in Europe, when he returns home to
the Philippines; he sees the corruption and abuse by the Spanish government,
and the Spanish Catholic clergy (Rizal). Loss of
culture in the country itself.
Terrance Houle, a Blood Indian from Southern Alberta,
has inspired
me because it made
wonder how people view Filipino people here in Canada. When I first saw this work in the McCord museum, it
flipped a switch in my brain, and that’s when I began to consciously think about
my thesis.
Parallel lives – growing up, his parents
tried to keep their children connected to Blood and Blackfoot traditions, houle and
his sibling’s were sent to public schools where he was able to see the divide
between his culture and the mainstream culture. (Murray Whyte).
Similar, the only way my culture survived
in myself was through my parents, and family. The school system didn’t teach me anything about my
culture. I
don’t have a detachment, however I just wish I had more knowledge on my own
culture.
Therefore I have to do a lot of research about
traditional Filipino textiles on my own because my family and parents don’t
actually know anything about traditional weaving, and in Marian Pastor-Roces’s Sinaunang Habi: Philippine Ancestral Weave, This is actually addressed, how filipinos
today don’t know about the traditional textiles
Textile
History Based Research
-Roy
W. Hamilton’s From the Rainbow’s Varied Hue
-Marian
Pastor-Roces’s Sinaunang Habi: Philippine Ancestral Weave
Weaving
Based Research
-Donna
Sullivan’s Summer & Winter
-Marguerite
Porter Davidson’s A Handweaver’s Source Book and
A Handweaver’s Pattern Book
Research
as Prototype
Weaving
will be an important aspect of my final work therefore I know I have to make
samples of the final weave structure and pattern I want to use, and I
know I have to get used to weaving yardage.
Weaving
is important to my culture, to my family and to me
My
grandmother, whom I never had the chance to meet, as she died a month before I
was born, was a weaver. I own one of the blankets she wove for my mother and
her siblings. The blanket I own was made for my mom and my dad. I never knew
she was a weaver until last year, when my mom randomly told me about her mom,
we never really talked about her mom before. I don’t know what the feeling was
and it’s kind of hard to explain, but when I found out that I had this in
common with my grandmother, I felt complete and proud. My mom also recently told me that I got my talent from my
grandma, she was a dressmaker and weaver.
My aunt, my moms older sister, is going
to actually look for the fabric that my grandma wove when she was still alive,
my mom told me that my grandma wove a lot of yardage, that hasn’t been used yet. So hopefully mu aunt
will be able to find it and send it to me.
Nature
vs. nurture
Weaving
comes naturally to me, it’s the first thing I had learned from OCAD that I knew
I loved. Looking back on first year, I realized I had taken quite a liking to
weaving and it had come easily to me.
I
actually woven with a bit of pina thread, it was wonderful
Natural
dyeing is also an important aspect to my final work, I plan on using
avocado(skins and leaves), mango(skins
and leaves) and banana leaves as
the primary dye source
my
ancestral home in the Philippines (where no one live in anymore) has an avocado
tree growing in the back yard (my dads side)
my
family home in the Philippines has mango trees and banana trees
growing throughout the property
The following slides include the rough sketches and muslins i had prepared for my mid-term critique, which has changed slightly. Also, the photograph fabric were done by myself on a 16 shaft loom where i had created my own original drafts, woven with a plain weave in between each pattern weft.
0 comments:
Post a Comment