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Santa Fe International Folk Art Market

Panel winnows down applicants for folk art market

by Karen Meredith on December 3, 2010

Anne Constable | The New Mexican
Posted: Monday, November 22, 2010.  This article was syndicated from The New Mexican, click here for the original article.

2011 Algerian Berber Culture jewelry application from Karim Oukid Ouksel

Judy Espinar, a founder of the Santa Fe International Folk Art Market, called this event the “heart of the market.”

It is the three days in late November when a selection committee meets to evaluate the hundreds of applications received from around the globe and choose those artists who will be invited to Santa Fe for the popular July event.

The process ensures the work for sale is authentic and of the highest quality, and, Espinar said, “Without it we would not have succeeded.”

The stakes are high for these artists, some of whom have never left their villages. Earnings from the market can — and have — meant they can send children to school, pay for health insurance or pipe fresh drinking water into their communities. In one case, an Afghan co-op used some of its market revenue to train female beggars in traditional embroidery, enabling them to earn income safely at home, and, they say, removing them from the streets of Kandahar.

Being chosen for the market — the largest of its kind in the world — is also a validation of the artists’ skills and the value of their work in preserving and sustaining the culture of their communities.

This year, 403 artists or artist cooperatives submitted applications. Under the direction of Suzanne Seriff, a committee of six experts, many with doctoral degrees, evaluated them, looking for a geographic balance, a wide choice of genres and prices, and a 60-40 ratio of new artists to returning ones.

2011 application from Ukraine: pottery by Golovko Mykhailo

The market is always looking for new work to keep visitors interested in coming back, while continuing to present the art of masters that marketgoers expect. Looking to enhance the visitors’ experience, it also has a preference for applications in which the artist plans to be present in Santa Fe, as opposed to a dealer or nonprofit representative.

Some applications are rejected outright because of shoddy workmanship or because the committee does not believe the work would sell here. “Quality and marketability are essential,” Seriff said. “If we thought something would not sell, we would not approve bringing it here.”

Applications are also turned down because the design, materials or form are not traditional. The market doesn’t accept Western clothing, even if it is made from traditional textiles, or trinkets like cell phone covers or eyeglass holders, although it does approve of items like place mats and table runners that might originally have had other uses.

Other times it’s a close call. One application from Kyrgyzstan was still being discussed Sunday. The design (the sacred symbol of mother deer) of the shawl was expertly rendered in felt, sandwiched on either side of a layer of silk cloth.

“It’s a delicate balance,” market director Charlene Cerny said. “We don’t want to put folk art under a bell jar.”

But a company that is keeping indigo dyeing alive in a Malinese village — accepted last year after a long debate — was rejected for 2011 because the artisans are now using linen cloth that they didn’t weave themselves.

So too a Nigerian painter. “I’d love to have his work on my wall, but it’s not traditional art,” said Diana Baird N’Diaye, a committee member from the Smithsonian Institution.

One of the first-time applications that was accepted came from Association Sahalandy, a group of silk weavers in the highlands of Madagascar who make hand-woven, naturally dyed scarves, bed covers, tablecloths and other products, ranging from $35 to $150.

2011 applicant from Indonesia: Ni Wayan Widiarmini; beaded baskets

A former Peace Corps volunteer from the area, who is now a small-enterprise development volunteer, helped the women prepare their application, which requires a detailed description of how the folk art is made. Their process is laborious.

“First, cocoons are sliced at one end to remove the pupa. They are then turned inside out and stacked on top of each other over a peg. Once bundled, they are boiled for a couple of hours and then rinsed. Afterward, the silk is thrown onto brick walls and dried in the sun. The clumps are then pulled into large balls to be spun.” The yarn is then dyed using tree bark (deep red), mud (black) mushrooms (yellow) and other natural resources.

Some applicants might lose out because their category is particularly competitive — African baskets, for example — but the odds are better in other genres, like ceramics, wood and leather, which are more threatened around the world.

Although giving young people a reason to continue to make traditional folk art is a “huge issue” for the market, in the words of Baird N’Diaye, applying is not easy — nor is it meant to be. Artists must complete an eight-page form (in triplicate) and submit five to 10 high-quality, clearly labeled photographs of each distinct type of folk art they would be bringing to market, as well as three photographs of each artist who will attend. Some applications are fairly slick, others are handwritten in broken English. In Kyrgyzstan, a travel agent supplements her living by helping people prepare the forms.

Applicants are responsible for obtaining their own passports and visas — although the market provides them with advice on how to go about it — and arranging to ship their artwork.

“They have to be ambitious enough to get here,” noted Cerny. “But a wide variety of people somehow find a way.”

The application includes a section on artistic and cultural information in which applicants are asked to explain how they learned to make the folk art, its history, how it represents their community’s cultural traditions and how the work is used in daily life or for special occasions. The market also asks applicants to tell their personal stories and how art fits into their lives.

Each member of the committee does the initial review of applications from a particular part of the world. But the final decisions are made by majority vote (consensus was found to be too difficult) of the entire committee.

The scorecard, or matrix, rates the applications on artistic quality, marketability, traditionality of form or final product, and traditionality of design or materials, as well as on whether the production process is rooted in tradition, how the artistic knowledge was acquired and the community use of the item. There’s also a place to check whether the artist has a compelling story.

Rejection letters explain the reason the applicant was turned down but invite artists to contact Seriff for a more complete explanation. Many do, she said.

So far, the 2011 market looks new and fresh, said Espinar, who observed the process last weekend. And she expects that will continue for a long time to come because “we have the world. There’s no end to it.”

2011 dates: July, 8, 9, 10

2010 Market Facts

132 artists from 50 countries

22,167 people attended

$2.1 million in artists’ sales

$13.5 million in local spending by visitors (outside of Market)

$16.1 million estimated total economic impact

1,600 volunteers

Artist applications

2011: 403

2010: 361

New artists:

2011: 57 percent

2010: 48 percent

Artists requesting financial assistance:

2011: 31 percent

2010: 28 percent

Countries represented:

2011: 63; 2010: 63

Countries with most applicants:

2011: Uzbekistan, 66; Mexico, 45

2010: Uzbekistan, 71; Mexico, 43


Artist Selection Committee

Suzanne Seriff, senior lecturer, Department of Anthropology, University of Texas at Austin

Diana Baird N’Diaye, Smithsonian Institution, Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, Africa

Barbara C. Anderson, director of museum resources, New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, Mexico

Marsha C. Bol, director of the Museum of International Folk Art, Latin America

Felicia Katz-Harris, curator of Asian and Middle Eastern collections, Museum of International Folk Art, Asia, Middle East, Europe

Melinne Owen, artist, volunteer, China, Tibet, Mongolia, Uzbekistan

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2010 Folk Art Market: A weekend tour of world talent

by Karen Meredith on April 16, 2010

By Anne Constable | The New Mexican
Posted: Thursday, April 15, 2010

Article syndicated from The New Mexican, click here to view the original article.

Cermamic Figurine by Magdalena Martinez

At a dinner in Mozambique last year, the people around the table were deconstructing the International Folk Art Market held in Santa Fe the previous July.

The market, presented annually for the last six years, is already the largest of its kind in the world and a major contributor to the Santa Fe economy — to the tune of almost $16 million (including gross receipts tax on artists’ sales and visitors’ purchases, payroll and contracts, lodger’s tax and spending by tourists who attend the event).

The discussion included staff, local artists and some people from Santa Fe on the market’s Folk Art Safari. Out of that exchange of ideas — and requests from artists — came the decision to allow them to sell their traditional handmade goods during the market’s Friday night opening party.

“When you’re far away you can (sometimes) see things more clearly,” said Charlene Cerny, the market’s executive director.

So, while munching on snacks, partygoers this year will be able to do some shopping in the lighted booths. A good part of Milner Plaza, where the market takes place, will be tented this year, just in case it dares to rain. And there also will be dancing to TradiSon, a Cuban band that plays at La Bodequita del Media, a popular Havana restaurant that was a haunt of writer Ernest Hemingway. Tickets are $125.

The Friday night sale is just one of the things that’s new at the 2010 market, set for July 9-11.

TradiSon

Founders Cerny, Judith Espinar (creative director) and staff work year-round to make each market better and different from the last.

Nearly half of all the participants, who are chosen by an independent selection committee, will be new. They include people from Cameroon, Ethiopia, Israel, Kazakhstan and the Ukraine. Among the items for sale this year are felt rugs from Kyrgyzstan, tribal garments from China, recycled metal sculptures from Haiti, tie-dyed bandhani garments from India, filigree jewelry from Spain, rebozos, or shawls, from Mexico, and woven silk textiles from Laos.

One of the new artists is Magdalena Martinez, a physician from Oaxaca, Mexico, who makes ceramic figures fashioned from clay. When sculpting the figurines, she begins with the face, then builds a scaffolding for a traditional costume by flattening a length of clay like a tortilla and folding and forming it to the shape of the body. Martinez, whose father was also a well-known ceramicist, presses the details of the costume into the torso, adding the arms and legs before firing the piece.

Jubulile Nala is another market newcomer. She learned to build her hand-coiled and painted clay pots from her grandmother and her mother, Nesta Nala, in KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. Although the family’s work is in museum collections, Jubulile and other artisans from her region have trouble making a living. She uses clay dug from local riverbanks that is dried, mixed and hand ground to fashion the beer pots symbolizing hospitality and community which are used at Zulu weddings, births, marriages and burials. With knives, stones, corncobs and even umbrella spokes, she makes decorations such as beading or nipples on the surface. After firing, she rubs the pots with animal fat.

To kick off what is now billed as International Folk Arts Week, the Museum of International Folk Art will open an exhibit of the work of women’s cooperatives from Bolivia, Rwanda, Peru, Swaziland, India, Kenya, Laos, South Africa, Morocco and Nepal that are represented at market. The Gallery of Conscience exhibition highlights weaving, beadwork, painting, baskets, embroidery and other traditional folk arts.

The exhibit “Empowering Women: Artisan Cooperatives That Transform Communities” is guest curated by Suzanne K. Seriff, chairwoman of the market’s artist selection committee, and is devoted to what Seriff describes as “the issues that threaten the survival of the traditional arts.” Tours with the curator and a representative of the women’s co-ops will be offered.

Later in the week, Diana Baird N’Diaye, a cultural anthropologist with the Smithsonian Institution’s Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, will moderate a colloquium for artists at which they will exchange information on topics (selected by participants) such as preserving cultural traditions, expanding market access, leadership and management skills and product development.

“We’re listening more to our artists. What do they think? What do they want to learn?” Cerny said. That, Espinar added, is “a very new way for nonprofits to work with their constituents.”

On Wednesday, the market is co-sponsoring a presentation by Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof. Kristof and his wife, Sheryl WuDunn, published a book last year titled Half the Sky about how women around the world who have been abused and oppressed have, with a little financial help, survived and become part of the economic life of their communities. Tickets for that event went on sale April 1.

Besides providing income for the artists (who take home 90 percent of their sales revenues), the market supports whole communities in their home countries and helps ensure the continuation of traditional crafts. At the same time, Espinar said, making folk art can have a profound effect on the future of the family. “Passing on all of these cultural things goes along with being there for their children,” she pointed out, “and very often makes a difference as to whether their children go to school.”

She predicted that one day, “One of these women is going to be president of some country.”

Normally the market provides financial support only to first-time market artists, but given the disaster in Haiti, the organization is paying all the expenses for four Haitians, including the two who created the awards for last year’s Clinton Global Initiative.

Dressing up the market is always a priority. Each year, there is another layer of decoration added, often inspired by Cerny’s and Espinar’s travels around the world to find new treasures to bring to the market. This year, because there is an Afro-Cuban theme, volunteers will be covering poles with African fabric, gathered like a Roman shade and wrapped diagonally with tinsel.

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The Santa Fe International Folk Art Market Returns for Its Seventh Year, July 9th, 10th & 11th, 2010

February 5, 2010

The largest event of its kind in the world, the Santa Fe International Folk Art Market  provides an unparalleled chance to collect cultural treasures, meet the artists who created them, and have a direct and even profound impact on the lives of not only the artists but also their communities around the world. For this [...]

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