Echoes of Yesterday: An Art of Tomorrow

Felipe Carrillo Puerto, Quintana Roo: ancestral techniques that are preserved

Artisan of the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

Community

In the community of X-Pichil, in the heart of Quintana Roo, Amanda Tah Arana and the Loo'l Pich collective revive the legacy of embroidery of past generations. 

Artisan of the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

Machinery of yesteryear

Through old pedal machines and the study of other embroidery techniques that have been transmitted from generation to generation, the collective has achieved a resurgence of its history.

Embroidery from the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

Rescued techniques

Bak bi chuy, kulpach chuy, jujun ts'íib, ka'atúul ts'íib are some of the 20 techniques that Amanda and the Loo'l Pich collective have rescued and transmitted to the youngest members of the community.

Embroidery from the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico., Antonio Muñoz, 2023-09-02, From the collection of: Ministry of Culture of the Government of Mexico
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Embroidery from the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico., Antonio Muñoz, 2023-09-02, From the collection of: Ministry of Culture of the Government of Mexico
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Artisan of the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico., Antonio Muñoz, 2023-09-02, From the collection of: Ministry of Culture of the Government of Mexico
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Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

Conversations by the Loo’l Pich collective.
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Living heritage

For the Loo'l Pich collective, these techniques transcend art on fabric; they go hand in hand with family stories, with the language of their grandmothers and grandfathers. They are stories about their roots and the formation of the community in which they live.

Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

Reverence for their history

Amanda shares customs that Loo'l Pich follows faithfully, such as not embroidering on Sundays, a curious legacy of her grandmothers that they maintain with respect today.

Artisan of the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

Living memories

Among the gems rescued by the collective, there shines the "x-manikte," which means "always alive." 

Perpetual stories

Elsewhere, it is known as  "X'manikbeen", and evokes the idea of perpetuity.

Embroidery from the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

Family wisdom

Amanda recalls the words of her great-grandmother: the "X'manikbeen" vanished, because, when evoking the scales of a snake, many believed that it carried a bad omen. 

Embroidery from the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

Reverse engineering

Thanks to the discovery of a piece of inherited fabric, Amanda and the collective unlocked the secrets of the x-manikte by unraveling it. Today, this technique is being revived in Quintana Roo, an ancestral legacy rekindled from the heart of Loo'l Pich.

Embroidery from the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

Rescuing the color of the earth

That is not the collective's only project. Together with UNESCO, Loo'l Pich is embarking on a crucial project: rescuing the use of natural dyes. 

Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

Paths of life

Under the mantle of Loo'l Pich, the ancestral techniques of embroidery are reborn, and unite the past with the present. With echoes of their grandmothers and grandfathers, they explore and preserve the techniques of the past to give them a future.

Artisan of the Loo’l Pich Collective in the community of X-Pichil, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2023-09-02) by Antonio MuñozMinistry of Culture of the Government of Mexico

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