Showing posts with label weaver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weaver. Show all posts

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Light at the End of the Tunnel

Yes, I see light!

FIVE more paintings to complete the 30 Day Art Challenge.

I am behind with postings. One more set tomorrow and next week I will post the rest after I retrieve my camera which I left at my son's house. Another good reason to see my grandson on a weekly basis.

The first one is of two Quechua girls (do you think they are sisters?) watching the children playing on the school grounds.


We went to a textile gallery and shop in Cuzco and we intrigued by the weavers at work.



The textiles were awesome and had to restrain myself from buying.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Ix-Chel, Mayan Moon Goddess

Having visited Isla Mujeres (“Island of Women”) recently, I learned that this island was devoted to the worship of Ix-Chel. Comfortable with all phases of life, she was honored as the weaver of the life cycle. She protected the fertility of women and was also the keeper of the souls of the dead.

As an ancient fertility goddess, Ix-Chel was responsible for sending rain to nourish the crops. When fulfilling that function she was called “Lady Rainbow”. She helped insure fertility by overturning her sacred womb jar so that the waters would flow.

Though sometimes depicted as a goddess of catastrophe (the woman who stands by as the world floods), many of her myths show her in a more benevolent light—as a goddess who refused to become a victim of oppression.

This was a woman who, when faced with adversity, took charge of her life and turned it around! Ix-Chel encourages us to acknowledge the negative forces affecting our lives. And she prompts us to assert ourselves fully in the face of physical or emotional violence that would diminish our sense of self.

I created a watercolor painting of Ix-Chel