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Amsden has divided Navajo weaving into four distinct styles.
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Updated on: 15 Sep 2016, 12:27
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Amsden has divided Navajo weaving into four distinct styles. He argues that three of them can be identified by the type of design used to form horizontal bands: colored stripes, zigzags, or diamonds. The fourth, or bordered, style he identifies by a distinct border surrounding centrally placed, dominating figures.
Amsden believes that the diamond style appeared after 1869 when, under Anglo influence and encouragement, the blanket became a rug with larger designs and bolder lines. The bordered style appeared about 1890, and, Amsden argues, it reflects the greatest number of Anglo influences on the newly emerging rug business. The Anglo desire that anything with graphic designs have a top, bottom, and border is a cultural preference that the Navajo abhorred, as evidenced, he suggests, by the fact that in early bordered specimens strips of color unexpectedly break through the enclosing pattern. Amsden argues that the bordered rug represents a radical break with previous styles. He asserts that the border changed the artistic problem facing weavers: a blank area suggests the use of isolated figures, while traditional, banded Navajo designs were continuous and did not use isolated figures. The old patterns alternated horizontal decorative zones in a regular order.
Amsden’s view raises several questions. First, what is involved in altering artistic styles? Some studies suggest that artisans’ motor habits and thought processes must be revised when a style changes precipitously. In the evolution of Navajo weaving, however, no radical revisions in the way articles are produced need be assumed. After all, all weaving subordinates design to the physical limitations created by the process of weaving, which includes creating an edge or border. The habits required to make decorative borders are, therefore, latent and easily brought to the surface. Second, is the relationship between the banded and bordered styles as simple as Amsden suggests? He assumes that a break in style is a break in psychology. But if style results from constant quests for invention, such stylistic breaks are inevitable. When a style has exhausted the possibilities inherent in its principles, artists cast about for new, but not necessarily alien, principles. Navajo weaving may have reached this turning point prior to 1890. Third, is there really a significant stylistic gap? Two other styles lie between the banded styles and the bordered style. They suggest that disintegration of the bands may have altered visual and motor habits and prepared the way for a border filled with separate units. In the Chief White Antelope blanket, dated prior to 1865, ten years before the first Anglo trading post on the Navajo reservation, whole and partial diamonds interrupt the flowing design and become separate forms. Parts of diamonds arranged vertically at each side may be seen to anticipate the border.
1. The author’s central thesis is that (A) the Navajo rejected the stylistic influences of Anglo culture (B) Navajo weaving cannot be classified by Amsden’s categories (C) the Navajo changed their style of weaving because they sought the challenge of new artistic problems (D) original motor habits and thought processes limit the extent to which a style can be revised (E) the causal factors leading to the emergence of the bordered style are not as clear-cut as Amsden suggests
2. It can be inferred from the passage that Amsden views the use of “strips of color” in the early bordered style as (A) a sign of resistance to a change in style (B) an echo of the diamond style (C) a feature derived from Anglo culture (D) an attempt to disintegrate the rigid form of the banded style (E) a means of differentiating the top of the weaving from the bottom
3. The author’s view of Navajo weaving suggests which one of the following? (A) The appearance of the first trading post on the Navajo reservation coincided with the appearance of the diamond style. (B) Traces of thought processes and motor habits of one culture can generally be found in the art of another culture occupying the same period and region. (C) The bordered style may have developed gradually from the banded style as a result of Navajo experiments with design. (D) The influence of Anglo culture was not the only non-Native American influence on Navajo weaving. (E) Horizontal and vertical rows of diamond forms were transformed by the Navajos into solid lines to create the bordered style.
4. The author would most probably agree with which one of the following conclusions about the stylistic development of Navajo weaving? (A) The styles of Navajo weaving changed in response to changes in Navajo motor habits and thought processes. (B) The zigzag style was the result of stylistic influences from Anglo culture. (C) Navajo weaving used isolated figures in the beginning, but combined naturalistic and abstract designs in later styles. (D) Navajo weaving changed gradually from a style in which the entire surface was covered by horizontal bands to one in which central figures dominated the surface. (E) The styles of Navajo weaving always contained some type of isolated figure.
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Thank you for understanding, and happy exploring!
Originally posted by Legendaddy on 11 Sep 2012, 16:38.
Last edited by Kurtosis on 15 Sep 2016, 12:27, edited 1 time in total.
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