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‘Color Riot’ is a vibrant display of Navajo textiles at the Museum of Arts, St. Petersburg Maggie Duffy, Tampa Bay Times © MARTHA ASENCIO RHINE/Times/Tampa Bay Times/TNS The Museum of Fine Arts new exhibition, Color Riot! How Color Changes Navajo Textiles, during a media preview on Friday, Dec. 18, 2020 in St. Petersburg.
ST. PETERSBURG In these dark times, the exhibition “Color Riot: How Color Changed Navajo Textiles” at the Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, is a welcome display of color and pattern – a vibrant escape from the gloom.
Organized by the Heard Museum in Phoenix, Arizona, where it debuted in 2019, the exhibition explores the color and design experimentation that came into Navajo textiles during the late 19th century.
More than 80 weavings tell the story of Navajo history with vibrant colors and experimental design techniques
Unidentified artist, Navajo, Womans Transitional Chief Blanket, 18801890, Handspun wool, three-ply commercial yard, indigo, natural colored wool, aniline dyes, Collection of Carol Ann Mackay.
ST. PETERSBURG, FLA
.- Bold diamond shapes, dominant stripes, and eye-dazzling zigzags in brilliant colors are just some of the design elements seen in the stunning artistry of Navajo textile art starting from the nineteenth century.
In the new special exhibition, Color Riot! How Color Changed Navajo Textiles, individualism and a flair for experimentation of Navajo weavers are vividly expressed in textiles from the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century to today. During this time, weavers acquired new materials, such as vibrant aniline dyes and complex Germantown yarns. These colors, combined with examples of the design system of Hispanic textiles, touched off expe
ST. PETERSBURG â Bold diamond shapes, dominant stripes, and eye-dazzling zigzags in brilliant colors are just some of the design elements seen in the stunning artistry of Navajo textile art from the 19th century.
In âColor Riot! How Color Changed Navajo Textiles,â a new special exhibition, individualism and a flair for experimentation of Navajo weavers are vividly expressed in textiles starting from the last decades of the 19th century. During this time, weavers acquired new materials, such as vibrant aniline dyes and complex Germantown yarns. These colors, combined with examples of the design system of Hispanic textiles, touched off experiments with color and design in Navajo weaving that were unprecedented.
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