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![]() Although the historical and artistic evolution of the artform remains undocumented, straw appliqué decoration on chests, boxes, and crosses in New Mexico appears to be a variation of European marquetry work. Marquetry is a method used to decorate a surface with small, thin pieces
of variously colored and contrasting materials, such as woods, metals,
ivory, bone, tortoiseshell, and mother-of-pearl. In marquetry work two
techniques of manufacture are employed.
Current thought holds that the art of straw appliqué died out in
New Mexico in the late nineteenth century and was revived in the early
twentieth century by master artist Eliseo Rodriguez. The use of straw
appliqué by Jose Dolores Lopez in the late 1920s may indicate an
overlap of survival and revival in this ephemeral but enduring art. |
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Last Modified: Thursday, 20-Sep-2007 10:41:20 MDT