Pisbil batz'i no (Wool Yarn)
Maruch Sántiz Gómez
- Series:Creencias (Beliefs)
- Date:1996
- Technique:Gelatin silver print on paper
- Dimensions:Image: 15,7 x 23,5 cm
- Edition/serial number:2/20
- Category: Photography
- Entry date:1999
- Register number:AD01507
Mu xtun xich' jipolanel ta ixtolanel li pisbil batz'i noe, mi yich' ixtolanele mu xlok'oj o jlik k'u'il, ak'o mi volabil ti jayvol ono'ox chich'e, yu'un la chbat ta ik' li sch'ulel tzotze.
It is bad to play with a ball of yarn because the garment will not turn out complete even though the thread has been counted. This is because it is said that the wind will take away the spirit of the wool.
The Chiapas Photography Project, an initiative by the American-born Carlota Duarte and in collaboration with Sna Jtz’ibajom (The House of the Writer) in San Cristóbal de las Casas, enabled indigenous artists like Maruch Sántiz Gómez to employ photography as a means of creative expression. Sántiz Gómez’s first project, Creencias de nuestros antepasados (The Beliefs of Our Ancestors), which she started in 1994, seeks to document and compile the traditions of the Tzotzil people, traditions which the elders have endeavoured to pass on and the younger generations are losing. Consequently, Sántiz Gómez travelled to different locations in Chiapas to talk with the eldest inhabitants, and, subsequently, via images first in black-and-white and later in colour, she used a minimalist aesthetic to photograph the objects and animals these beliefs referred to and also recreated their family environment. The photographs are accompanied by a text in Tzotzil with translations in Spanish and English, thus prompting the consideration that both elements are consubstantial and inseparable from the project Beliefs, which is why some critics have placed Sántiz Gómez’s work within the parameters of the conceptual, as well as pointing to her ability to update visual and oral traditions by virtue of photography and iconography. Despite a favourable reception, Beliefs has also given rise to debates around indigenous art in Mexico and its idealisation among critics.
Diego Fraile Gómez