|
In January 2000
a Calvin College interim class that included art and Spanish majors
traveled to Peru. There, high in the Andes mountains, they met an American
artist and author, Dr. Gail Silverman, who taught them about the woven
art of the Andes.
Now, at the invitation
of those Calvin students, Silverman will bring her hands-on teaching
style to Grand Rapids for a series of talks on the Calvin campus.
On Monday, October
9, Silverman, a former Fulbright Scholar who hails from Michigan, will
come to Calvin. Her day will begin with a talk for Spanish majors on
"Culture and Language in the Indigenous Communities of Cusco."
In the afternoon,
beginning at 4 p.m. in the Commons Lecture Hall, she will deliver a
free, public lecture called "An Anthropological View of Andean Cloth
Perceived as Pictographic Writing." Silverman studied anthropology at
Wayne State University and the Sorbonne in Paris. For that lecture she
will bring samples of weaving done by the Andean people. Those samples
will illustrate her talk and be on sale after the lecture.
In the evening
Calvin and the Woodland Weavers Guild will co-sponsor a talk titled
"Andean Cloth: Its Technical Features and a Goal for the Future." This
evening workshop is a more hands-on, technical view of Peruvian weaving,
dyeing yarn and imagery. It takes place at 7:30 p.m. in the Commons
Lecture Hall and is free and open to all.
Silverman and her
Peruvian husband live in Peru where they encourage community among the
Peruvian weavers and have a shop to help preserve and sell authentic,
natural dyed products. Silverman also is an author who writes about
the work of Peruvian artists.
|