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The TRC has embarked on a new large-scale and very exciting project. Following the publication in February 2016 of the 688-pageEncyclopedia of Embroidery from the Arab World, a new contract was signed with Bloomsbury Academic in London to publish an equally beautifully illustrated and highly informative successor volume, namely an encyclopaedia of embroidery from Central Asia, the Iranian Plateau (Iran and Afghanistan) and the Indian Subcontinent. The volume is edited by Gillian Vogelsang-Eastwood, director of the TRC, and Willem Vogelsang, dept. director of the International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS), Leiden. Use is made of the extensive TRC collection of textiles and garments from that part of the world. In December 2018 the manuscript of the Encyclopaedia was submitted to Bloomsbury and the book is due to be published by the end of 2020.

Counted thread embroidery from among the Hazaras, Afghanistan. TRC 2008.0236.Counted thread embroidery from among the Hazaras, Afghanistan. TRC 2008.0236.Central Asia, the Iranian Plateau and the Indian subcontinent have throughout history been in close contact. For millennia, people from Central Asia have migrated from the north towards what is now known as Iran and Afghanistan, and hence they often moved either west, towards modern Turkey, or east towards the Indian subcontinent. Others, be they nomads, pilgrims, tradesmen or soldiers, moved directly from east to west and from west to east. This is the story of the Indo-Iranians, the Scythians, the Turks, the Uzbeks, Sufi saints and itinerant craftsmen. In addition, all of this part of the world has in recent centuries felt the pressures from further away, from Russia, Europe, China.

Deandra de Looff, een student aan de faculteit der Archeologie van de Universiteit Leiden, is aan het onderzoeken hoe Shirlastain (een commercieel chemisch produkt waarvan de exacte samenstelling geheim wordt gehouden) gebruikt kan worden in archeologisch onderzoek, en met name of en hoe het gebruik van Shirlastain een snelle en betrouwbare methode kan zijn om verschillende vezeltypen, zoals wol, vlas en hennep, te identificeren. Het onderzoek bestaat uit het maken van replica’s van historisch textiel, het experimenteren met de daaraan verbonden methoden van spinnen, weven en verven, en het daarna bepalen, met behulp van een microscoop, of Shirlastain nog steeds verschillende vezelsoorten kan identificeren nadat deze zijn bewerkt. Het onderzoek is een onderdeel van een stage bij het TRC.

In 2007 the TRC was involved in hosting a conference at Leiden University and the National Museum of Ethnology on the forms and uses of prayer beads from various religious and spiritual backgrounds. There was also a small exhibition on the same theme based on items out of the TRC’s extensive collection of prayer beads. Because of the TRC moving to its current premises, etc., the Prayer Bead Project was put on hold with the expectation that we would return to it. This has now happened and a book on this theme is nearly finished. It looks at the history of prayer beads, as well as the main Buddhist, Christian, Eco-Spiritual, Hindu, Islamic, Neo-Pagan and Sikh forms, to name just a few. Many of the prayer beads in the TRC collection are used to illustrate the book (photographs by Joost Kolkman). It is the intention that the book will be published by 2017 and that there will be an accompanying exhibition at the TRC.

The textiles and garments from the tomb of the Egyptian pharaoh, Tutankhamun, who died ca. 1323 BC, have to date received scant attention, although they constitute the largest group of items from the tomb, and they certainly will provide a wealth of information about the state-of-the-craft of Egyptian and Middle Eastern textile production in the second half of the second millennium BC. The TRC is therefore very honoured, and thrilled, that the Egyptian museum authorities have granted Dr Gillian Vogelsang-Eastwood, director TRC, and her team access to the conservation laboratories and other facilities of the new Grand Egyptian Museum, Cairo, Egypt, in order to carry out, always under the supervision of GEM restoration specialists, a full examination of the Tutankhamun textiles, clothing and related items housed at GEM. 

This means that Dr Vogelsang, the TRC, as well as Prof. Olaf Kaper, Dept. of Egyptology, Leiden University, and a growing group of Egyptian scholars and students and many other international experts, can further develop a large-scale and in depth study of all of the textiles and garments that were discovered by the British archaeologist, Howard Carter, when he opened the tomb of the Egyptian pharaoh in 1922. The Egyptian authorities have asked for assistance in preparing a detailed catalogue of the textiles; to develop a strategic plan for displaying the items; and helping to prepare educational items (including books and replicas) to better inform the public about the textiles and garments and how they were worn by the young pharaoh.

See also the ancient Egyptian sewing bee, organised for April 2016

Catalogue of the Crowfoot Collection of spinning and weaving equipment in the TRC

Thanks to the generosity of John Crowfoot, grandson of Grace Crowfoot, the TRC has recently been given a most unusual gift. This includes items of spinning and weaving equipment collected by Grace Mary Crowfoot, a Grande Dame of textile archaeology. She collected the items btween 1909 and 1937 when she and her husband, John Crowfoot, worked and lived in the Middle East. The objects include Sudanese, Palestinian, Syrian, as well as European items, notably a collection of spindles and whorls, a bedouin spinning stone, sword beaters, weaving shuttles, pin beaters, and samples of Sudanese cotton. All are neatly labelled with information as to where the objects come from.

In addition to these items, the TRC was already in possession of a number of letters written by Grace Crowfoot to Mr. Robert Charleston in the 1940s.  Mr Charleston later worked at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. The letters discuss various aspects of textile history and work in progress. For the Charleston letters, the TRC is currently engaged in a separate programme.

Onderzoeker: Riet van de Velde-Lagendijk

Het TRC heeft een uitgebreide collectie van kanten mutsjes uit Nederland, alsook uit andere Europese landen, die dateren van Kanten kapje met gouden sieraden over een zilveren casque, Drenthe. TRC Collectie Kanten kapje met gouden sieraden over een zilveren casque, Drenthe. TRC Collectie halverwege de negentiende eeuw tot vandaag de dag. Deze mutsjes waren een belangrijk kledingstuk dat gedragen werd door meisjes en getrouwde vrouwen in West-Europa. Ze werden gebruikt om zaken zoals de burgerlijke, sociale, regionale, religieuze en zelf financiële status van de draagster zichtbaar te maken.

Op dit moment wordt de TRC collectie gecatalogiseerd en gefotografeerd. Een gedetailleerde beschrijving van de productie, verschijning en gebruik van de kapjes zal hierdoor aan een groter publiek kunnen worden gepresenteerd. Kanten kapjes uit Nederland worden vaak beschreven aan de hand van de regio van herkomst – Rijnland, Volendam, Zeeland etc., maar kanten kapjes, in stedelijke of plattelandse vormen, uit andere delen van Europa worden zelden besproken. Het doel is dat de collectie van het TRC digitaal beschikbaar wordt gesteld voor andere onderzoekers zodat zij deze kunnen bekijken, bediscussiëren en overeenkomsten en verschillen kunnen bespreken. Dit project zal met name interessant zijn voor sociaal geschiedkundigen.

Foto’s en data zullen in de loop van 2015 op de website beschikbaar zijn.

Researcher: Koen Berghuijs

During and following the successful exhibition on hand spinning ('The Spinning World') exhibition held at the TRC in 2011, Koen Berghuijs (curator of the exhibition and archaeologist) has been collecting postcards with representations of men and women hand and wheel spinning. These images come from many different cultures and periods from around the world.

Most of the postcards date from the beginning of the 20th century and provide an insight into pre-industrial spinning technology and forms of equipment and place these in their social, economic and cultural contexts. There is also, however, a hint of romanticism in that some of the 'spinners' depicted were probably models and may never have done any spinning at all. Similarly, there is an element of depicting the 'noble savage/happy peasant' carrying out an 'exotic' task, whether in Ireland or Africa.

Project duration: The aim of the project is to have all the relevant postcards annotated and then published in either actual or digital form. The Centre for Textile Research, Copenhagen University, has expressed interest in publishing the volume as part of their textile series. It is anticipated that the basic manuscript will be ready by the end of 2015.

Researchers: Shelley Anderson and Alice Jaspers.

Robert J. Charleston (1916-1994) was the keeper of Ceramics and Glass at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. He helped to build up the collection that is considered to be one of the most comprehensive in Europe. He published extensively and, as one of the most eminent experts on glass, served as a consultant to museums and collections around the world. A keen amateur historian and archaeologist, Charleston also had another, less well-known passion, for textiles.

This project will scan, transcribe and translate, for the first time, the TRC's unique collection of Charleston's early correspondence regarding his research into Roman textiles. This collection includes letters to and from pioneering archaeologists such as Sir Mortimer Wheeler, Grace M. Crowfoot, and R. Pfister, among others. The letters, written during and shortly after the Second World War, reveal a remarkable pan-European scholarly cooperation among British, German, French, Italian and Hungarian researchers. Mr. Charleston gave the letters to Dr. Gillian Vogelsang-Eastwood, director of the TRC, in May 1985 and they were given to the TRC some years ago.

Project duration: The project is divided into three stages: (a) transcribing and annotating the letters between Charleston and Grace Crowfoot, (b) transcribing and annotating the letters with other experts, (c) preparing the annotated letters for digital publication.

 

Zoek in TRC website

Contact

Hogewoerd 164
2311 HW Leiden
Tel. +31 (0)6 28830428  
info@trc-leiden.nl

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Bankrekening

  • NL39 INGB 0002 9823 59
  • Stichting Textile Research Centre

Openingstijden

Maandag t/m donderdag van 10.00 tot 15.00 uur

Financiële giften

Het TRC is afhankelijk van project-financiering en privé-donaties. Al ons werk wordt verricht door vrijwilligers. Ter ondersteuning van de vele activiteiten van het TRC vragen wij U daarom om financiële steun:

Giften kunt U overmaken op bankrekeningnummer (IBAN) NL39 INGB 000 298 2359, t.n.v. Stichting Textile Research Centre. BIC code is: INGBNL2A

U kunt ook, heel simpel, indien u een iDEAL app heeft, de iDEAL-knop hieronder gebruiken en door een bepaald bedrag in te vullen: 
 

 

 

Omdat het TRC officieel is erkend als een Algemeen Nut Beogende Instelling (ANBI), en daarbij ook nog als een Culturele Instelling, zijn particuliere giften voor 125% aftrekbaar van de belasting, en voor bedrijven zelfs voor 150%. Voor meer informatie, klik hier