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Women
potters of San Marcos Tlapazola, Oaxaca
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Gloria,
Luci and María: Luci's public school graduation
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Every Sunday Gloria awakens at 3 am, and begins preparing
tejate, a frothy, tasty corn and cacao based drink,
which she will offer for sale in the Tlacolula market. A couple
of hours later her sister-in-law María and Marias
daughter Luci follow suit, but in preparation for their own
day of vending pre-Hispanic-style figures and masks, comals,
and an assortment of other fired clay bowls, cups, plates
and containers. Sundays, the women laugh, is their day of
rest, when they dont have to worry about scrounging
for firewood, tending fields, lugging raw material for kneading
into clay --- the lifeblood of their economic existence ---
and in the case of María, looking after preparing breakfast
for Luci and her older brother and getting them off to school.
The family of four lives in a modest yet fair sized dirt-floor
compound in San Marcos Tlapazola, a Zapotec village about
an hour outside of Oaxaca. Nearby Tlacolula is known by tourists
and native Oaxacans alike for the pageantry of its Sunday
marketplace, its bakeries wonderful chocolate-filled
buns, the church, proximity to fields of agave and mezcal
factories, and products offered for sale by the women of San
Marcos.
Gloria, María and Luci are 40, 38 and 12 years old
respectively. While in the market, their traditional dress,
consisting of brightly colored and embroidered taffeta dresses
and head-dresses, easily sets them and others from nearby
villages apart from the rest. Luci confesses that she also
likes wearing regular clothing.
In her lifetime, only once has Gloria been to Oaxaca. The
mere thought of venturing into the big city intimidates her.
Clumps of hard earth are soaked. On a concrete floor in an
almost barren dark room, María kneads the then softened
mud with water and a bit of sand, while kneeling and working
her magic, until a buttery smooth clay is ready to be fashioned
into a vase. With her hands raised to just about head level,
she molds a cone, pounds out the inside to create a funnel,
then places it on a small hard piece of plastic atop a flat
stone, with a bit of sand as a buffer. The sand enables her
to spin the form into a sphere. She uses rolls of clay to
build up it up. A piece of corn cob is used to make the outside
surface even, and another piece of plastic to cast the inside.
A small round segment of hardened gourd assists in producing
the desired, final exterior shape. A strip of soft leather
facilitates the creation of a smooth finish. Then onto the
next one.
Gloria is sitting a few feet away, beginning to burnish a
small bowl she has removed from under a cloth covering several
others. Shes using one of two almost golf ball sized
highly polished river stones given to her by her grandmother.
She has already coated the series of bowls with a mixture
of a different, much redder clay, and water, so as to create
a terra cotta colored paint tone. Once hard and dry, all that
Gloria and María have produced over the course of days,
is ready for baking.
Some alfareros in the town of Atzompa use above-ground
brick and cement ovens. Others in San Bartolo Coyotepec and
Ocotlán use below-ground brick-lined pits. Manuel Reyes
in Yanhuitlán constructed his own twin kilns out of
clay brick, lengths of re-enforced steel, and mud. But the
women of San Marcos, each and every time they want to bake
their clay pieces, build a makeshift enclosure at ground level,
made variously of discarded bed spring, pieces of rusted through
wheel barrow, bent bicycle tire rim, old sections of otherwise
unusable laminated metal, and broken pieces of pottery which
have not survived a prior firing.
A cousin sometimes comes by in a truck to sell Gloria and
María a load of twigs, branches and rotted out logs,
for anywhere between 400 and 1200 pesos, depending on the
load size. Sometimes he brings by dried agave leaves, stock,
and pieces from the heart or piña which have for some
reason not been harvested for mezcal production. The women
themselves often gather up similar pieces of potential fuel
while in the course of walking the hills outside of their
village, and tie them up to both sides of their mule before
heading back home.
A day of baking can usually proceed smoothly if there is no
rain, and any earlier precipitation has not left the wood
wet; if its not too windy; and of course if there is
a sufficient supply of burnable product on hand, and not too
much of the scrap metal has been rendered unusable through
the beginning stages of decomposition / disintegration.
Typically, María is in charge of process, while Luci
assists, and Gloria divides her time between doing other household
chores such as cooking tortillas and being called upon when
María tires or has been affected by the intense heat,
or a stage in production is time-sensitive.
All the pottery to be baked is assembled outside, in close
proximity to the area where the oven will be built:
a series of rustic clay pots --- an order for a client who
makes and sells piñatas; three comals which were not
sufficiently fired on a previous occasion; numeral clay figures
of different sizes and forms, for the Tlacolula tourist trade;
and an assortment of functional pots, bowls and plates, as
well as a few small spoons and tiny colanders.
A circular base approximately two meters in diameter is created,
using preferably bed spring placed atop a couple of staggered
layers of brick, since such a foundation provides for aeration.
Broken pots, old metal receptacles, roofing tile, and whatever
else is close at hand creates a confining perimeter. Small
twigs and pieces of agave heart are placed underneath. María
cuts agave leaves with a machete. With the aid of an extremely
heavy, meter-and-a-half long crow bar known as a barreta,
Gloria pitches in by splitting log pieces and lengths of dried
agave stock. María and Luci build a flammable base
atop the spring. With gingerly proficiency, María both
directs and assists in placement of the pieces. From her years
of experience she knows how to best achieve even firing and
avoid breakage.
More of each class of burnable, as well as dried tumbleweed,
is carefully placed on top of the clay pieces. Hot ash from
making tortillas is shoveled into crevices to facilitate incineration,
while a couple of matches set to a few special added twigs,
a natural kindling, assures a quick light. A fairly strong
wind fuels an initially fledgling fire, and within seconds
the blaze is raging and smoke is billowing. More branches
and died agave parts are tossed on, with the upmost care since
multi-directional wind tunnels have been created. Gloria must
fully cover her head to ensure that spark does not ignite
her hair. Each takes a turn extricating herself from the swirling,
seemingly out-of-control flames. Finally, sheets of rusted
metal are strategically placed alongside, and atop, to control
the entry of air being drawn to the inner portions of the
enclosure.
The mornings work completed, flames are left to dissipate,
while Gloria, María and Luci sit, have a drink of fresh
fruit juice, and rest. After about 45 minutes baking will
have been completed. The area will be left to cool, while
Gloria and María return to their simple work room,
add a bit of water to their drying clay, and begin kneading
before once again beginning production of another diverse
lot. Later in the day the oven will be disassembled, pottery
removed with hopefully a minimal amount of breakage, ash dusted
off. The women of San Marcos Tlapazola will then wrap and
box their merchandise in preparation for their next trip to
market.
Most Sundays María can be found sitting on the ground
with Luci, with an array of rustic clay figures and masks,
as well as a selection of traditional Zapotec cooking and
serving utensils displayed in front of them, on one side of
an outside aisle in the Tlacolula marketplace. Gloria will
be directly across from them, pouring cups of tejate to thirsty
passersby.
Casa
Machaya Oaxaca Bed & Breakfast ( http://www.oaxacadream.com
) ©
Alvin
and Arlene Starkman are passionate about Oaxaca. They endeavor
to retain their reputation as proprietors of one of the best
Oaxaca bed and breakfasts, Casa Machaya Oaxaca Bed & Breakfast
( http://www.oaxacadream.com
). Casa Machaya, a founding member of the Oaxaca Bed and Breakfast
Association, combines the attributes of quality Oaxaca hotels,
with the characteristics of a more progressive and personalized
Oaxaca lodging style: owners are on site 24 / 7 (its
your accommodations
and our home), always available
to guests as their personal resources, and willing to go that
little bit extra to ensure value-added service.
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