Hello-

In November 2021, The National Endowment for the Arts included a lacemaker in
Puerto Rico among the National Heritage Fellows.  I find it interesting that
she is called a “master weaver” -- which is accurate and possibly a better
marketing label than lacemaker.  Something to ponder.

The Culture of America  To honor the 2021 NEA National Heritage fellows, the
National Endowment for the Arts produced an inspiring film,
<https://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001BC63cN7KbQuPHy5cuD52jMB4rHY5AXzuXKp6JlneqssU
pYNMSXLx9xfjO91nVTOdR90KajJKseVfcvtHStFspnQXU5WtUTQuRJP2WHkq6XFDEkKebq3swHwos
leza-_iQi46narSBwj5PiaYAvWtZzsz_tYM8fngDlJ-ArwTaGNM6iqDw30CPTrPLxUzLUej&c=UW9
RyH4RoDPVWXwcHK2WHLC-D_tuNt9aM6eKOXyq8LIKpNmI67ZT2w==&ch=WhE4K2geehaNK1Rv9jEW
maOk3yV2cj31F-ttqJ2TGIr58h3VtGet-w==> The Culture of America,
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yoC3KF0Ew1I
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yoC3KF0Ew1I&t=1s> &t=1s) in which Emmy
Award-winning actor Jimmy Smits takes viewers on a virtual trip across the
country where this year’s National Heritage Fellows live and work.

Nellie Vera  Mundillo Master Weaver   A video of her interview is at
https://www.arts.gov/honors/heritage/nellie-vera

The soothing sound of the wooden bobbins meeting each other as they weave the
mundillo lace have always been part of the life of Nellie Vera, known
affectionately by everyone as Doña Nellie. Born in the town of Moca, known as
the “Capital of Mundillo” in Puerto Rico, she learned this traditional art
form from her mother, Manuela Sánchez, when she was seven years old. Mundillo
is a handmade bobbin lace made in a lap box called a telar. It holds a rounded
pillow with a pattern secured by pins that guide the process of maneuvering
the threads holding the wooden bobbins. The lace is produced by the weaving of
the wooden bobbins, which in turn make a harmonious click-clack melody.

That sound is what made Vera fall in love with mundillo as a child when she
visited with her mother and other weavers in town. This was in the Puerto Rico
of the 1930s, when mundillo was a strong labor force in Moca.
Industrialization brought many foreign and cheaply made laces, which led to
the decline of the mundillo art form. Along this time, she earned her
bachelor’s degree in education from the University of Puerto Rico and worked
as a teacher. After retiring in 1980, she reunited with mundillo.

In 1982, she was one of the founding members of the Borinquen Lacers, a
respected mundillo weavers collective affiliated with the International Old
Lacers. She also presided for 20 years in the Taller de Artesanos Mocanos, a
nonprofit that fostered the work of more than 300 artisans from the town of
Moca, and, alongside other mundillo weavers, pushed for the creation of the
Museo del Mundillo. On an island where most of the cultural institutions are
established in the capital of San Juan, Vera was adamant that if a mundillo
museum was going to be created, it had to be in Moca, where it is now
established.

In 2000, her work received an honorific mention in the first edition of
FERINART, the International Arts & Crafts Fair in Puerto Rico. Then in 2004,
she was awarded a national recognition as a Master Artisan by the Puerto Rican
Artisanal Development Program under what is now the Department of Economic
Development and Commerce. In 2009, she received the Artisanal Excellence Award
from the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture. In 2012, Vera was recognized as an
Outstanding Artisan by the Puerto Rican Artisanal Development Program and in
2014, as National Symbol. Then in 2015, she was inducted into the Artisan Hall
of Fame of Puerto Rico. She has also been lecturer in the Incarnate Word
College of Texas (1995) and in The Field Museum de Chicago (2006).

After dedicating more than 40 years to the art of mundillo, Vera not only
still finds the essence of nature in its intricate designs, but also describes
it as her way of life.

Sending wishes for a Happy and Healthy New Year from Albany, NY

Lorraine Weiss

PS.  While I’m typing, I want to acknowledge and thank the master weavers of
IOLI and OIDFA who have greatly improved my pandemic experience with all of
the programming over the past 1.5 years.  The virtual IOLI conference was
outstanding, creative, and just plain fun, and both organizations have offered
wonderful online programs.  Support these organizations if you can.

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