Belt Item Number: 3486/120 from the MOA: University of British Columbia

Description

Narrow, child-size belt (cinta) with 3 bands of paired squares in navy/yellow (centre) and red/green (flanking); warps at both ends are finished in braids that are coming undone.

History Of Use

Belts of different types are used by men, women, and children, and some have special names. Most belts are called chumpi (Quechua) or cinterone (Spanish). Some belts are associated with pregnant women and their babies, where they are used to fasten the swaddling cloths around the infant. Belts for children are usually smaller in size. In some areas, very wide belts are worn with a stiff underbelt, which acts as a back support. Belts in Andean villages are usually made on a continuous warp and the last few inches are finished by braiding. A wide variety of techniques are used to pattern the belts. The imagery woven on belts is usually drawn from a set of geometric and figurative icons that are combined in ways that are distinctive of a particular community.

Iconographic Meaning

The design is called “pata” (flat place; pata-pata refers to stairs) in the very conservative community where it is made, and the image can be traced back to Inca motifs and practices.

Specific Techniques

Woven in a complementary warp weave with 3-span floats in alternate alignment, “intermesh” weave variant. The side selvedges are woven in one-weft double-cloth, which makes tubular edges.

Narrative

Purchased by donor in Cao, Chicama Valley in 2009. It was bought in a shop that sold textiles for members of the cooperative (Centro de Investigación Textil Chuguay) in San Ignacio de Loyola.