Sac ethnique au modèle et design unique.
Authentique sac Waayu fait à la main, tissé en crocheté en Colombie.
Coloris : blanc, noir, brun.
Dimensions : Hauteur : 30 cm environ / Longueur de l'anse 110 cm environ / Diamètre 22 cm environ
Porté épaule.
Acrylique.
Authentic Wayuu bag handmade in Colombia. Unique design and model.
Size : Height 30 cm / Strap length 110 cm / Diameter 22 cm
Colors : Light beige, brown, black.
Acrylic.
Cartagena | Sac ethnique mochila tissé
A propos
Le peuple Wayuu (prononcé "Wah-You") est un groupe latino-américain indigène qui vit dans le désert de La Guajira, à la frontière de la Colombie et du Venezuela. Chaque mère Wayuu apprend à ses filles à tisser et à crocheter, en gardant la tradition aussi vivante que jamais. Pour le Wayuu, le tissage est un symbole de sagesse, d'intelligence et de créativité. À mesure que les jeunes femmes Wayuu grandissent, elles apprennent à créer des sacs Mochilas Wayuu. Selon la légende, la tradition vient de "Wale´kerü", une araignée qui a appris aux femmes à tisser leurs dessins créatifs dans les sacs Wayuu. Chaque motif est unique, et propre à son créateur, qui raconte une histoire à travers les couleurs, les motifs et les formes du sac.
Details
The Wayuu (pronounced "Wah-You") people are an indigenous Latin American group inhabiting the visually striking desert of La Guajira Peninsula which borders Colombia and Venezuela. The Wayuu live in small settlements called "rancherias" which consist of five or six houses. Within these rancherias, the Wayuu people are able to preserve a way of life that has been passed down through the generations and remains unscathed by modern culture. Organized in matrilineal clans, the Wayuu children carry their mother's last name, making the Wayuu women not only the center of the family but cultural leaders as well. One of the most significant aspects of culture that the Wayuu women practice is the art of weaving Mochilas Wayuu bags. Each Wayuu mother teaches her daughter how to weave and crochet, keeping the tradition as alive and vibrant as ever. To the Wayuu, weaving is a symbol of wisdom, intelligence, and creativity. As young Wayuu women come of age, they learn to create Mochilas Wayuu bags. According to legend, the tradition comes from "Wale´kerü", a spider that taught the women how to weave their creative drawings into the Wayuu bags. Each design incorporated into every Wayuu bag is unique to the weaver, telling a story through the bag's colors, patterns and shapes.