2014.46.1 Cut-thread cloth (pelete-bite)


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Pelete means "cut-thread" and bite means "cloth" in the Ijo language. Pelete bite is uniquely associated with Kalabari peoples living in the Delta region of Nigeria and produced solely by Kalabari women in the town of Buguma. Kalabari Ijo women modify the original striped or checked patterns on imported Indian madras cotton cloth by cutting and removing selected threads to produce a new, intricate, lace-like pattern. They accomplish this by two painstaking processes: 1) lifting threads singly or in groups with a needle and snipping them off with a razor or penknife, or 2) lifting certain weft threads—the transverse threads—with a needle and pulling them out entirely. This pelete-bite was originally a vertically striped patterned cloth. The artist redesigned the cloth by snipping white warp (vertical) threads to create alternating blue and white slanted bars within the red stripes. The border has likewise been redesigned with white bars on a blue field. The artists declare that the uncut cloth “speaks” to them as they work directly on the cloth, without a preconceived design.

The cloth is worn by men and women on the occasions of major social events and funeral celebrations. The cloth is used to decorate the funeral rooms and beds of elderly women. This honor is reserved for elderly women who lived long enough to acquire enough cloths for this purpose.

Adapted from
  • Roslyn A. Walker, Label text, Add to, Take Away: Artistry and Innovation in African Textiles, 2014.
  • Roslyn A. Walker, DMA unpublished material, 2014.

NOTES

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PROVENANCE 
2014: Dallas Museum of Art, gift of Dr. Joanne B. Eicher

The main source for this provenance is the copy of the Deed of Gift in the Collections Records object file.

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General Description
 
Pelete means "cut-thread" and bite means "cloth" in the Ijo language. Pelete bite is uniquely associated with Kalabari peoples living in the Delta region of Nigeria and produced solely by Kalabari women in the town of Buguma. Kalabari Ijo women modify the original striped or checked patterns on imported Indian madras cotton cloth by cutting and removing selected threads to produce a new, intricate, lace-like pattern. They accomplish this by two painstaking processes: 1) lifting threads singly or in groups with a needle and snipping them off with a razor or penknife, or 2) lifting certain weft threads—the transverse threads—with a needle and pulling them out entirely. This pelete-bite was originally a vertically striped patterned cloth. The artist redesigned the cloth by snipping white warp (vertical) threads to create alternating blue and white slanted bars within the red stripes. The border has likewise been redesigned with white bars on a blue field. The artists declare that the uncut cloth “speaks” to them as they work directly on the cloth, without a preconceived design.

The cloth is worn by men and women on the occasions of major social events and funeral celebrations. The cloth is used to decorate the funeral rooms and beds of elderly women. This honor is reserved for elderly women who lived long enough to acquire enough cloths for this purpose.

Adapted from
  • Roslyn A. Walker, Label text, Add to, Take Away: Artistry and Innovation in African Textiles, 2014.
  • Roslyn A. Walker, DMA unpublished material, 2014.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
Notes

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
2014: Dallas Museum of Art, gift of Dr. Joanne B. Eicher

The main source for this provenance is the copy of the Deed of Gift in the Collections Records object file.

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
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2014.46.1
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
women: AAT: 300025943
%Archived
@Bilal-Gore
stripes: AAT: 300010230
white (color): AAT: 300129784
*Arts of Africa
red (color): AAT: 300126225
patterns (design elements): AAT: 300010108
textiles (visual works): AAT: 300014063
Nigeria (nation): TGN: 1000182
ceremonial costume: AAT: 300210387
cloth: AAT: 300162391
weaving: AAT: 300053642
funerals: AAT: 300069162
warp: AAT: 300227930
weft: AAT: 300227934
cotton (fiber): AAT: 300183670
thread (material): AAT: 300014250
cutting (dividing): AAT: 300053069
celebrations: AAT: 300152441
Ijo (culture): AAT: 300016056
pelete bite: AAT: 300262805
navy blue: AAT: 300311067
source file
object_notes_2_c-0191.xml.nores