Jackie Abrams
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      • Pokuase, Ghana • Jan 09
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Blog

Hexagonal Weave Workshop

7/22/2019

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It was a wonderful gathering of 150 basketmakers at the National Basketry Organization's Conference, held on the campus of Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, KY. The students in my hexagonal weave workshop made some beautiful and impressive baskets!
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Annetta Kraayeveld
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Karen
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Martha Bird
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Susan Hagoel
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Joyce Guertin
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Linda Johnson
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Michelle Gerdes
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Karen Woods
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Lynne Dees
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Sue Van Wassenhove
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"Cathead Baskets: the Basics and Beyond"

6/11/2019

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It was a wonderful few days weaving cathead baskets. We explored these beautiful forms, shaping feet, creating sculptural and twill baskets - at Fibre Works Studio & Gallery in Madeira Park, on the Sunshine Coast, BC, Canada. 
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Bibi Sillem
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Kerry
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Margot Hallman
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Dale MacEwan
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Lilly Thorne
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Taryn Lindquist
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Pia Sillem
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Kathie Tweedie
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Lois McArthur
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Ursula Schmidhauser
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"Come Twine With Me"

6/6/2019

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We had a great few days at Fiber Works Studio & Gallery, in Madeira Park, on the Sunshine Coast in BC, Canada. It was a great group of students, who learned to twine with some non-traditional materials. There was lots of laughter and chatter, with great food provided by Alexis Bach. 
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Bibi Sillem
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Edmund Arceo
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Nyika Jones
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Pia Sillem
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Cindy
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Georgia
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Penny Connell
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Donna
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Nancy Phillips
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Taryn Lindquist
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Woven Cathead Baskets at Snow Farm

5/18/2019

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What a fun week we had!! It was the Road Scholar Week, held at Snow Farm: the New England Craft Program, in Williamsburg, MA.
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Amy Sunshine
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Mary Jones
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Celia Strickler
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Toni Neuwirth
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Deborah Bean
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"Not Your Mother's Coiling" in Brattleboro, Vermont

4/15/2019

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It was really fun to open my home/studio for a "Not Your Mother's Coiling" workshop here in Brattleboro, Vermont. It was a little crowded with six students, but I seemed to be the only one who minded. Everything I wished to show as an example was here! So convenient. And great baskets were made!
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Carmella
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Isabel Lenssen
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Jana Rice
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Linda Powers
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Judith Darrow Freed
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Stephanie Levy
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"Not Your Mother's Coiling" in Portland, OR

3/17/2019

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It was a great few days! There were many wonderful baskets/vessels created, amid lots of laughter! Many thanks to the Columbia Fiber Arts Guild and to Nancy Geren for arranging it all!
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Beverly Woodard
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Donna Belt
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Maris Cavanagh
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Jill P. Hoddick
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Margaret Blake
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Lottie Smith
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Linda Powers
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Susan Allen
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Leslie Carabas
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Paula
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Christine
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Sally Anaya
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Cindy Davis
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Margaret Jeppesen
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Shakti Sutriasa
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Judy Carney
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Baskets in Guatemala

2/13/2019

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I met Elsa Asturias in the summer of 2018. She is from Guatemala, and is an artist, a business woman, an organizer, a translator. When she learned that I had done craft development work with women in Africa, she asked if I might be interested in working with the women who live near the dump in Guatemala City. "Of course." And she began working her magic to make it happen...
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​​Guatemala City, at a 5,000’ elevation, lived up to its reputation as “The Land of Eternal Spring.” The weather was perfect. There were clean streets and sidewalks almost everywhere, as well as numerous markets that sold colorful woven textiles, leaves for wrapping tamales, and everything in between. 
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making tortillas
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El Mercado Centrale
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In certain parts (zonas) of town, the goats came right your doorway, ready to be milked. ​There was also a great deal of traffic, a lot of air pollution, and guards with guns everywhere. 
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For much of my visit, I stayed with Elsa at her beautiful home, high in the hills, with Guatemala City far below. 


Week #1

During my first week, I worked with the UN Women / ONU Mujeres. With Eugenia Close as the Coordinator of Economic Empowerment, this group has been working to empower rural women. For this project, they selected two leaders in each of four communities in the Polochic Valley. For safety reasons, it was decided that we would all travel to work in Antigua, rather than work in the villages. The women traveled for 8 hours to get to the workshop. For two of them, it was their first time leaving their community.
 
We had two translators, Elsa translating from English to Spanish, and Kimberley translating from Spanish to Q’eqchi’. 
 
They learned coiling, crocheting, and cordage-making, using recycled plastic bags and used clothing. They were all skilled, and learned quickly. They made lots of baskets/canastas and bags/bolsas. They helped and taught each other. They will share their skills in their communities.  
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The women expect to be able to sell their work in their local markets. Unfortunately, competition is intense, and they will be compensated very little for their labor. One benefit of this work is that the cost of their materials will be low. The UN Women will be working with them to help develop outside markets, with the possibility and hope of developing a more reliable income. 
We all stayed together, working and eating, at a beautiful hotel, Casa Cabo.
While there, we experienced a tremor from an earthquake, and watched Volcan de Fuego puff as we ate our meals. 
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Some evenings we ventured into Antigua, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. 
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Week #2

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The Guatemala City Garbage Dump covers over 40 acres, is 9 layers high, and has 970 trucks and 2500 trash pickers a day. Vultures are always circling overhead. There are occasional fires from escaping methane gas. The pervasive putrid odor is an assault on your senses.
In 1999, Hanley Denning, a young woman, decided to do something for the children who live in the community surrounding the dump. She started Safe Passage / Camino Seguro. You can watch a great video about it here. 
Despite her untimely death, her legacy continues. Camino Seguro
provides education, books, and food for nearly 500 children who live in the community, ranging in age from 3 to 21 years. Its goal is to break the cycle of poverty, emphasizing life skills and perseverance. 
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Creamos is the Social Entrepreneurship Program of Camino Saguro. With Hannah Sklar as the Project Leader, it involves women who live in the community, zone 3, surrounding the dump. Creamos’ vision is “to create a community of healthy and independent women… (and if we) develop both financial and emotional skills, they will have the ability to change their lives, families and communities.”
 
We, Christina Chiribo, the translator, and I, worked with some of these women for a week, teaching them to coil baskets of recycled plastic bags and fabric scraps collected from the sewing room. Hannah expects to be able to sell these baskets, along with their poignant stories, for 50-70 Q ($6.00-$9.00) to tourists coming to witness Camino Seguro and Creamos. This is a large amount of money for these women.
 
They danced for us, showed their yoga moves, shared their babies, and were very proud to receive diplomas on the last day. 
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Bonifacia gifted me with her first basket, so that I would always remember her.
​It is hanging in my studio, and I will always remember her. 


So many thanks....

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Elsa y Eugenia

​Eugenia Close, of the UN Women, and Hannah Sklar, of Creamos, who made the arrangements so that the workshops could happen.  
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Christina Chiribo was an amazing translator for the workshop at the dump. She also proved herself to be a very good babysitter for Justa’s grandson. 

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​Mari Flor Solis, Dirección Ejecutiva at  Fundación G&T Continental, which supported this trip by paying for my airfare. Mari Flor jumped right in to learn to make a basket on the day she visited. 

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​And special thanks to Elsa Asturias, without whom this trip would have never have happened. Thank you. I will always remember. 


8 Comments

Hexagonal Weave Workshop in Brattleboro

10/21/2018

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What a great few days! We gathered in Brattleboro, Vermont, my home town, and worked in a studio at the River Gallery School. It was the perfect ending for my last workshop of the year!
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Catherine
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Ethel
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Peggy Thrasher
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Sue Matson
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David Stearns
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Jan Cannon
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Susan Zepeda
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"Bias For All"

10/1/2018

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It was an excellent workshop in Scottsville, Kentucky, sponsored by The Basket Maker's Catalog. 
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AJ Henry
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Barbara Nelson
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Gina Kieft
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Page Candler
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Susan Zepeda
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Barbara Holt
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Beth Hester
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Lisa Siedenstrang
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Sue Byrnes
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"Collect & Connect" at Snow Farm

8/11/2018

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It was a great week at Snow Farm: The New England Craft Program, in Williamsburg, MA. There was coiling and twining, cobbling and looping, amidst much chatter and a lot of laughter. What a great group of makers!
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Amy Sunshine
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Celia Strickler
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Jana Rice
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Marilyn Wright
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Yiyan Zhou
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Bronna Zlochiver
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Denise Markbreit
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Karin
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Lia LaPiana
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Nancy
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  • Home
  • About
    • News & Updates
    • Exhibitions & Galleries
    • Public Collections
    • Artist Statement
    • Resume
    • 46 Years in Images
    • Artist Talks
  • Portfolios
    • Precarious Shelters
    • Twinings
    • Collaborations
    • Women Forms
    • Elemental Vessels
    • Spirit Women
    • Other Works
  • Teaching
  • International
    • Central America
    • Australia & New Zealand
    • Africa >
      • Pokuase, Ghana • Jan 09
      • Ghana & Uganda • 08
      • Pokuase, Ghana • Aug 08
      • Pokuase, Ghana • Jan 08
      • Bolgatanga & Nungua, Ghana • 07
      • Ghana • 06
      • Namibia • 05
      • Nungua, Ghana • 05
  • Blog