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MUD-CLOTH PILLOWS

Bogolanfini Cloth from Mali

Our one-of-a-kind Mud-Cloth pillows use both the classic black and white bogolanfini mud-cloth and the ochre-red dyed bogolanfini rouge kola cloth, from the Dogon and Bamana peoples of Mali. Both fabrics are made of strip-woven cotton fabric which has been painted or stencilled with an iron-rich Malian mud by an ancient process. The red kola cloth is first dyed in a dye made from the kola nut. Pillows are backed with solid-colored linen fabric.

In July 2003 the fabulous Smithsonian Folklife Festival brought a superb group of artists, performers and musicians to the mall in Washington DC. These included Mali's masters in the art of bogolan, including the great Nakunte Diarra (below).



Nakunte Diarra
Bamana bogolan artist from Beledougou region, Mali


Bogolan cloth in process. Design hand-drawn with iron-rich mud on strip-woven cotton fabric by Nakunte Diarra.

The following information is from the Smithsonian website:

"Bogolan is to its wearer what the shell is for the turtle".

Mud-dyed cloth, bogolan, can not only be seen everywhere in Mali-it has gone global. Clothing and interior designers worldwide now use it or copy its designs.

The cloth's distinctive brown-red color comes from iron-rich mud. Traditionally, an artist handpainted only the negative spaces, letting the main image stand out as the unpainted white design on the cloth. Recently, some mudcloth artists have experimented with stencils that reverse how the design is made. The mud color becomes the main design, while the unpainted white areas serve as the design background.

Traditionally, Bambara (Bamanan) women, as well as those of the Minianka, Senufo, Dogon, and other ethnic groups, produced the cloth for important life events and taught the process to their daughters. Men, especially hunters, wore it for celebrations. Today, both women and men make mudcloth for sale in markets, and Malian students study it at the arts academy.

To learn more about the art of mud-cloth from the Smithsonian website click here.



Kola-Cloth Pillow (#mcp-1)
Bamana people, Mali
Bogolanfini Rouge kola cloth - a mud-dyed strip-woven cotton fabric. Back of pillow solid-colored linen
(14" x 14")
$48

SOLD



Kola-Cloth Pillow (#mcp-2)
Bamana people, Mali
Bogolanfini Rouge kola cloth - a mud-dyed strip-woven cotton fabric. Back of pillow solid-colored linen
(14" x 14")
$48 SOLD 6/06


Kola-Cloth Pillow (#mcp-3)
Bamana people, Mali
Bogolanfini Rouge kola cloth - a mud-dyed strip-woven cotton fabric. Back of pillow solid-colored linen
(16" x 18")
$58

SOLD


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Phone: (215) 765-1041 • Toll Free: (888) INDIART • Fax: (215) 765-1042
E-Mail: indigofamily@indigoarts.com

All photographs and text Copyright Indigo Arts Gallery, LLC., 1998-2011. Use without permission prohibited.

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