Apprentices at the 1994 Florida Folk Festival | Apprentices at the 1994 Florida Folk Festival | Still Image | Artisans Basket maker Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Festivals Special events Baskets Basket making White oak Arts, Cuban Masks Paper art Craft Material culture Apprentices | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Apprentices at the 1994 Florida Folk Festival
- Date
- 1994-05
- Description
- Thirty-five color slides. Many of the slides are blurry. Images of 1994 Florida Folk Artists apprenticeship demonstrators, including white oak basket maker Jennings and Steen, and David and Isaac Duenas, who made Cuban gigantes.
- Collection
Bente May OPederson making Danish Christmas heart baskets | Bente May OPederson making Danish Christmas heart baskets | Still Image | Basket maker Fieldwork Teaching of folklore Classrooms Children Students Elementary schools Education Basket making Paper art Paper work Danish Americans | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Bente May OPederson making Danish Christmas heart baskets
- Date
- 1991-12
- Description
- Seventeen color slides. Demonstration for first grade students at John E. Ford Elementary School. The Folk Arts in Education Project in Duval County was a joint venture between the Duval County School System and the Florida Folklife Program. It was started in 1984 by folklorist David Taylor with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts to add to existing social studies curriculum. The project consisted of field research to identify local traditions and folk artists, a series of five two-day seminars to acquaint teachers with the use of folklore and folk arts, in-school programs conducted by a folklorist and traditionalist, which included visits by local folk artists. Taylor ran it until 1986. In 1988, Gregory Hansen re-initiated it with minor changes.
- Collection
Chieri Esposito making temari | Chieri Esposito making temari | Still Image | Healer Paper art Paper work Fieldwork Apprentices Arts, Japanese Arts, Asian Temari Origami Japanese Americans Needlework Craft Material culture Decorative arts | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Chieri Esposito making temari
- Date
- 1985-07
- Description
- Ten color slides. Espasito, daughter to master folk artist Kasuko Law, making temari. She served as apprentice to Law in 1984-1985. Temari is the traditional Japanese art of decorating spheres by winding and lacing colored threads in intricate patterns around a core ball. The Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program began in 1983 with a NEA grant of $22,000. The program provided an opportunity for master folk artists to share technical skills and cultural knowledge with apprentices in order to keep the tradition alive. Apprentices must have had some experience in the tradition and agreed to train for at least six months. The first project director was Blanton Owen, later replaced by folklorist Peter Roller. The program was continued each year through 2003.
- Collection
Demonstrations of student paper art | Demonstrations of student paper art | Still Image | Artisans Teaching of folklore Education Elementary schools Paper art Paper work Demonstrations Children Paper airplanes Paper hat making Students | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Demonstrations of student paper art
- Date
- 1990-06
- Description
- Fourteen color slides. The Folk Arts in Education Project in Duval County was a joint venture between the Duval County School System and the Florida Folklife Program. It was started in 1984 by folklorist David Taylor with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts to add to existing social studies curriculum. The project consisted of field research to identify local traditions and folk artists, a series of five two-day seminars to acquaint teachers with the use of folklore and folk arts, in-school programs conducted by a folklorist and traditionalist, which included visits by local folk artists. Taylor ran it until 1986. In 1988, Gregory Hansen re-initiated it with minor changes.
- Collection
a_s1576_88_d01-023 | Friday performances at the 2001 Florida Folk Festival (Folklife Performance & Dance Stage) (Tape 1) | Sound | Artisans Educators Net maker Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Festivals Special events Performing arts Origami Paper art Paper work Arts, Japanese Asian American arts Minorcan Americans Education Occupational folklore Occupational groups Netmaking Fishing nets Net makers Maritime folklore Space flight Manned space flight Navigation (Astronautics) United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
a_s1576_67_c97-070 | Friday program at the 1997 Florida Folk Festival (Folklife Narrative Stage) (Tape 10) | Sound | Artisans Artists Musicians Guitarist Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Festivals Special events Oral performance Life histories Interviewing Arts, Jewish Jewish Americans Jewish art and symbolism Ketubah Calligraphy Marriage contracts Decorative arts Arts, Mexican Mexican Americans Paper art African Americans Steel guitars Musical tradition, sacred Gospel (Black) Gospel musicians Gospel music | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Friday program at the 1997 Florida Folk Festival (Folklife Narrative Stage) (Tape 10)
- Date
- 1997-05-23
- Description
- One audio cassette recordings. Side A: Catalina Delgado, a trunk and Mexican paper artist and Eileen Brautman, a Jewish paper artist are interviewed by Laurie Sommers. Delgado discusses paper-cutting techniques and how designs are made. Brautman explains traditional and contemporary calligraphy and paper cutting according to the European tradition. She tells of making stories from the Bible, use of animals and other designs and the making of a Ketubah (Jewish marriage contract). Side B: Sonny Treadway (Deerfield Beach, FL), sacred steel guitarist is interviewed by Laurie Sommers. He discusses sacred steel guitar and gospel music as well as his musical influences such as his father, other family members and church musicians. He plays by ear and has written several original songs.
- Collection
a_s1576_67_c97-064 | Friday program at the 1997 Florida Folk Festival (Folklife Narrative Stage) (Tape 4) | Sound | Artisans Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Festivals Special events Oral performance Life histories Interviewing Calligraphy Writing Paper art Paper work Arts, Jewish Jewish Americans Decorative arts Jewish art and symbolism | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Hisako Williams making origami umbrellas | Hisako Williams making origami umbrellas | Still Image | Paper work Paper art Origami Demonstrations Japanese Americans Arts, Asian Arts, Japanese Children Artisans | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Hisako Williams making origami umbrellas
- Date
- 1982-09-22
- Description
- Twenty color slides. Williams making miniature umbrellas out of cigarette packets. She was joined by a young girl in many images.
- Collection
a_s1640_20_tape08 | Interview with Kazuko Law and apprentice Chieri Espasito | Sound | Artisans Paper art Paper work Fieldwork Apprentices Arts, Japanese Arts, Asian Temari Origami Japanese Americans Needlework Craft Interviews Decorative arts Life histories Family history Emigration and immigration Dollmaking | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Interview with Kazuko Law and apprentice Chieri Espasito
- Date
- 1985-02-14
- Description
- One audio cassette. Interview with master folk artist Kasuko Law and her daughter (and apprentice) Chieri. They discuss family history and life in Japan and China (Law's father supplied the Japanse Army during the second world war); immigration to the United States in 1952; the uses of, designs for, and processes in temari making; origami; doll making; and learning and teaching temari and origami. Temari is the traditional Japanese art of decorating spheres by winding and lacing colored threads in intricate patterns around a core ball. For a transcript of the interview, see S 1640, Box 2, folder 13. The Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program began in 1983 with a NEA grant of $22,000. The program provided an opportunity for master folk artists to share technical skills and cultural knowledge with apprentices in order to keep the tradition alive. Apprentices must have had some experience in the tradition and agreed to train for at least six months. The first project director was Blanton Owen, later replaced by folklorist Peter Roller. The program was continued each year through 2003.
- Collection
Kazuko Law and apprentice Chieri Espasito making temari | Kazuko Law and apprentice Chieri Espasito making temari | Still Image | Artisans Paper art Paper work Fieldwork Apprentices Arts, Japanese Arts, Asian Temari Origami Japanese Americans Needlework Craft Material culture Decorative arts | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Kazuko Law and apprentice Chieri Espasito making temari
- Date
- 1985-02
- Description
- Fifty-one color slides. Espasito, daughter to master folk artist Kasuko Law, making temari with Law. She served as apprentice to Law in 1984-1985. Temari is the traditional Japanese art of decorating spheres by winding and lacing colored threads in intricate patterns around a core ball. The Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program began in 1983 with a NEA grant of $22,000. The program provided an opportunity for master folk artists to share technical skills and cultural knowledge with apprentices in order to keep the tradition alive. Apprentices must have had some experience in the tradition and agreed to train for at least six months. The first project director was Blanton Owen, later replaced by folklorist Peter Roller. The program was continued each year through 2003.
- Collection