Santa Fe International Folk Art Market

Tickets On Sale Now

Zarina Kendjaeva

Year(s) attended: , , , , , , ,

Suzani Embroidery - Tapestries, Curtains and Pillows

Zarina Kendjaeva

Work by Zarina Kendjaeva

Zarina uses silk threads dyed with madder, indigo, pomegranate and onion skins, and a variety of stitches including the hook stitch, an almost forgotten technique she is working to revive. She was taught by her mother, a master of embroidery, and learned hook work from an old Bukhara woman who was one of the last artisans who knew the technique. Zarina bases her designs on 18th and 19th century museum pieces.

Suzani was used for decorative wall hangings, curtains and bedcovers, as well as small functional household items, such as bags and pillow covers. They were made from finely hand woven cottons or silk material and often the embroidery covered the entire cloth leaving only very small areas not filled with intricate hand work.

Suzani is part of a renowned tradition of textile production in Uzbekistan and Central Asia. The techniques are being revived by artisans like Zarina. Traditionally, because young people never met before the wedding, young girls used the suzani patterns and workmanship to demonstrate their character and skills to impress potential suitors. The mothers of young men presented their sons with several suzani works from which the boys chose a bride.

The Santa Fe International Folk Art Market, a non-profit organization, produces the largest international folk art market in the world, and our success led to Santa Fe’s designation as a UNESCO City of Folk Art.