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Casa
Santiago: Rugweavers of Teotitlán del Valle, Oaxaca
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Gloria
Santiago spinning wool.
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Porfirio
Santiago is at his loom, diligently weaving a massive 2 x
3 meter rug with traditional designs, from memory, with representations
of Zapotec diamonds, rainfall, maize and mountains
just
as his father Tomás, grandfather Ildefonso and great
grandfather before him. Wife Gloria is carding a mix of white
and caramel colored raw wool. Behind them, hanging over the
black wrought iron banister overlooking the sunny open courtyard
are drying batches of spun wool in tones of green, brown,
red and blue, byproducts of the use of natural dyes from the
añil or indigo plant, seed pods, mosses, pecan, pomegranate
zest, and of course the cochineal bug.
Such ritual in Teotitlán del Valle, an ancient tribal
town about a half hours drive from Oaxaca, has been
played out continuously on a daily basis since about 1535,
when Dominican bishop Juan López de Zárate arrived
in the village and introduced borregos (caprine sheeplike
animals yielding wool) and the first loom, shipped from Spain
across the Atlantic. The use of natural dyes and weaving predate
the conquest, but it was the European invasion which jump-started
a cottage industry producing serapes, blankets and tapetes
(rugs).
Over generations the village grew, and began specializing
in solely rugs, initially used as trade and sale items within
a commercial network of towns in other parts of the state,
and to a lesser extent other regions of the country. With
the completion of the pan-American highway connecting Oaxaca
with Mexico City in the late 1940s, the market opened
up. By the 1950s air travel had begun to facilitate
greater export as well as a tourist industry which quickly
took notice of a broad range of handcrafted items from foreign
lands.
Artesanias Casa Santiago is comprised of a single extended
family whose main production facility, showroom and homestead
has been on the towns main street since 1966. Then Porfirio
occupied most of his working hours as a campesino in the fields,
with rug production as a sideline. Over the decades he began
spending fewer days working the land and more producing tapetes
of both traditional Zapotec designs, and more recently based
upon consumer demand, of modern patterns, reproducing themes
from the masters of modern art and accepting custom orders
such as the recent request for a wall hanging promoting Pentax
cameras.
Illustrative of the depth of this family tradition, five of
Porfirios six siblings and their families are weavers,
the other a pre-school teacher. On Glorias side, while
her siblings are members of a large well-known musical band
which plays at municipal fiestas, weddings, quince años
and other rites of passage, they too are trade artisans, although
more on a part-time basis. All of Porfirio and Glorias
children work in the industry, as do their spouses. Three
of four sons and their wives live on premises and work at
all phases of production, with the fourth having his own taller
just up the street. One son, Omar, is an architect, but is
nevertheless an integral contributor to all aspects of the
family business. One daughter and her husband work at the
main facility, another is employed at her in-laws workshop
and restaurant a couple of blocks away, and the last and her
husband have their own home and rug business. Each child completed
high school, deciding to thereafter keep the family tradition
alive to the extent possible. As has been repeating for generations,
the grandchildren, now 17 in number, while watching their
parents and grandparents from infancy, begin learning in earnest
at about 10 years of age, and by roughly 20 are proficient
at all aspects of the operation. In terms of the division
of labor, years ago women tended to dye, card and spin, while
the men were the weavers. Nowadays, at least in this family,
each is fully capable of performing all tasks, although its
exclusively men who work the largest looms requiring the greater
strength and stamina.
Another family convention has been the performing of important
administrative duties for the town without monetary compensation,
an aspect of voluntary community labor known as tequio. In
1931, Porfirios grandfather was mayor of the village,
and more recently between 1996 and 1998, Porfirio himself
was el presidente municipal. By then the job had become a
three year unpaid post, nevertheless requiring a full-time
commitment, necessitating doing the farming, raising family
and maintaining a rug business in the early morning hours
or after dark. Yet the pride and sense of responsibility in
serving ones community took priority over concerns about
being able to get all the work done in 24 hours that had to
be completed. Even today, Porfirio on a seasonal basis splits
his time between making and selling woolen products, and working
the fields to supply the family with corn for making tortillas
and tamales.
Despite being one of the most personable families one could
ever hope to happen upon in the Valley of Oaxaca, Don Porfirio
et. al. dont get the large tour buses stopping by their
shop for exhibitions. Perhaps its the personalities
of the family members which clearly doesnt lend to the
formality of onlookers seated in a gallery for a demonstration,
followed by a hard sell. María Luísa and husband
Jose Luís, Tomás, Hugo, and the rest of the
family on hand seem to have learned from their parents to
be more relaxed and engaging within a congenial informal setting.
Theyll take you to see whatever galvanized metal, plastic
or clay pots happen to be in use for dyeing, and bring over
a simple cardboard box to show you a half dozen or so natural
substances used for coloring the wool. If Gloria isnt
available to card and spin, perhaps a daughter-in-law will
shyly say that shell do it, smiling as she admits shell
not as good at is as her suegra. Its a more real and
honest attempt to demonstrate the way things are actually
done in the Santiago family, not at all contrived, and absent
any pretension whatsoever. Its what drew me and my wife
to Casa Santiago in 1993, for the purchase of our first tapete
which even today continues to enhance our living-room floor.
It draws us back time and again for a visit, often with a
spur-of-the-moment offer of a little mezcal with a botana,
either alone, with friends and family visiting from Canada
and the US, or with touring clients.
While Casa Santiago has over time succeeded in adapting to
changing domestic and international trends in terms of color
tones and combinations, designs and diversity of product (now
also offering handbags, wall hangings, pillow covers and more),
its the longstanding, proud Zapotec custom of producing
tightly woven, high quality traditional rugs which will live
on through Porfirio, Gloria and their lineage.
Artensanias Casa Santiago, Av. Juarez 70, Teotitlán
del Valle, Oaxaca 70420. Tel: (951) 524-4154; (951) 524-4183.
Web: http://www.artesaniascasasantiago.com .
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