These song cloths are worn as women's faldas skirts. Traditionally the women wear a black or white skirt stitched with the opposite color thread and colorful, embroidered ornamentation. The skirt is usually woven with two specific icaros, i.e., shamanic power songs: the wisdom icaro and the protection icaro. These icaros seem to be a common theme in these cloths, and in fact, the use of protection songs are extremely important in the world of Amazonian shamanism, and have been given their own category name, Icaros Arkana. This is an all-inclusive term for any type of protection icaro, which is a result of the ongoing battles between shamans and brujos. The need for a garment imbued with one of these protection icaros is paramount to surviving one of these supernatural encounters, so a great deal of energy is put into their creation. These song-patterns are geometrically fractal in their design, and this is especially evident when one looks closely at the complexity of the modern stitching patterns. In analyzing this stitch work, I've determined three primary styles. First, these tiny stitches that make up the background patterns were explained by Herlinda Augustin, a revered Shipibo shaman and weaver, to be representative of the cosmic oneness and I have come to call this the atomic stitch. To the Shipibo, this oneness very literally connects all things in the universe. Over the top of the atomic stitch is the main song line, and these patterns are recognized holistically by the shaman as the main identifying characteristic of the corresponding icaro. When I observed the shamans singing a cloth, they would trace their index finger along this main song line pattern, the melody rising or descending in general accordance with the rise and fall of the line, we see the visual metaphor of the shamanic staircase, represented as a descending song line. Along the main song line itself and at various points of intersection along its path, can be seen the beautiful geometric designs called the floras, this being a Shipibo term. These flowers represent turning points where the song may take a new direction, such as a new verse or chorus. According to Herlinda, it is also the point where new life is born into the cosmos. The colors of these flowers have significance as well, and they are woven in eight colors; black and white as the base colors of the cloth and primary stitch patterns; red corresponding with blood, childbirth, and the historical conflict between the Amazonian tribes; yellow for sunlight; green for the jungle; and blue for the rivers and lakes. Other colors include purple and orange, their significance is not yet known.
Source: Woven Songs Of The Amazon, Icaros and Weavings of The Shipibo Shamans by Barrett H. Martin
Fair and ethically
traded products
traded products
- Offering authentic, sustainable products that support artisans, their families, and indigenous ways Learn More...
Providing a connection to the sacred
arts of indigenous communities
arts of indigenous communities
- Consciously serving our community for over 22 years with integrity and passion Learn More...
Living in harmoney with each other
and our earth
and our earth
- Reducing our use of resources with Earth conscious shipping and packaging practices Learn More...
Fair and ethically traded products. Learn More
- Offering authentic, sustainable products that support artisans, their families, and indigenous ways Learn More...
Providing a connection to the sacred arts of indigenous communities. Learn More
- Consciously serving our community for over 22 years with integrity and passion Learn More...
Living in harmoney with each other and our earth. Learn More
- Reducing our use of resources with Earth conscious shipping and packaging practices Learn More...