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Direct from the Artist
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Textile Art
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Slovak folk costume - DETVA, beautiful lace picture
| Start Price |
USD 239.00 |
| Current Price |
USD 239.00 |
| Time Left |
- |
| Bid Count |
0 |
| Buy It Now Price |
- |
| Reserve Price |
- |
| Start Time |
Tuesday, November 25, 2008 |
| End Time |
Thursday, December 25, 2008 |
| Location |
western USA |
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See more about 'Slovak folk costume - DETVA, beautiful lace picture'
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Description
Slovak - European folk costume A Lady wearing KROJ from DETVA(artist from Bratislava, Slovakia living in the US) The size of the lady is 14 inches. This will be a nice addition to somebody's house who is proud to show their Slovak roots. The size of the frame is 16x20. It will be shipped to you in this size of the glass frame. The Bobbin Lace Art My name is Jana Čupkova Holmes and I was born and raised in Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia, in Eastern Europe. I am 36 years old and currently living in Arizona. This type of art is called a bobbin lace in English and is a very old form of art in my country. I learnt the bobbin lace when I was 12 years old. A teacher at school wanted to pass this beautiful lacework craft on to the students who were interested. So I took this opportunity and it turned out to be my big passion. Especially in the last two years my portfolio of the work I have done has grown extensively. Each piece is very time consuming and requires lots of patience. This piece - Lady in KROJ from DETVA - took me about 6 days to make. The oldest information about this type of lacework is from the 16th century from Italy, and from there this lacework spread to the whole of Europe. Dalmatian, Flemish and Spanish laces became well-known and were a means to make a living. There were lace-producing centers in the past supported by the state (i.e. Maria Terézia established the school of lacework in the year 1761). Lace-making also spread into Russia, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, England and to the area which later became Yugoslavia, from where it probably spread to Slovakia. Slovak lace registered success at the different world exhibitions, i.e. in Moscow in 1867, in Paris in 1892, in Vienna in 1897, and in Brugge, Belgium in 1956 where it inspired great interest. The oldest records in Slovakia are the records of miner lacework from the poor miner women from the Banská Stiavnica, Banská Bystrica and Kremnica mining districts. During the long winter evenings, peasant women were also making laces which then were used for decoration of bonnets, folk costumes, and various parts of clothes. They were also brought to market for supplemental income. It is very time-consuming work and machines can do the job in a fraction of the time, so like so many other hand-made items of the past, there are fewer and fewer people willing to do this type of work by hand. This is where each of the pieces is created.
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