Monday, September 2, 2013

Introduction





The tentmakers adage: A slow stitcher has a hungry family

The Tentmakers
Of
Sharaa Al Khayamiah

An Exhibition by the
Embassy of Egypt
for the Centenary of Canberra
Windows to the World

9am – 3pm
28 & 29 September, 2013
1 Darwin Avenue
Yarralumla  ACT

With demonstrations by tentmakers 
Hany El Sayed and Ekramy Hanafy 


Open Weekend Events and Highlights

The Embassy of the Arab Republic of Egypt is proud to participate in the Centenary of Canberra Windows to the World program and share some of the riches of Egypt through an Open Weekend on Saturday 28 September 2013 and 29 September 2013.

The centrepiece of the Egyptian Embassy's Open Weekend is an exhibition of the work of Egyptian Tentmakers.  

The Embassy is pleased to exhibit part of the collection of Jenny Bowker, a Canberra-based international quilting professional and winner of the 2013 Rajah Prize, Australia's pre-eminent quilting prize which commemorates the Rajah Quilt.  

Jenny has lived in Egypt and facilitates recognition and support of the work of the tentmakers.

With the generous collaboration of Canberra Quilters, two tentmakers, Hany El Sayed and Ekramy Hanafy will attend the exhibition and demonstrate their mastery of this ancient and contemporary art. 

During the Open Weekend, you can view the Exhibition and visit the light-filled rooms to see replicas of ancient artefacts, and current day links between Egypt and Australia. 

Eminent Australian-Egyptians take pride of place in the relationship between Egypt and Australia and a gallery of eminent Australian-Egyptians will be on display. You can read about their lives and their  achievements and rich contribution to Australian life.

Also on display will be a selection of Jenny Bowker's Egypt-inspired award winning quilts.  

You can sample Karkehdeh, a traditional Egyptian drink, listen to Egyptian music and take a photo of yourself with the Sphinx.  

Fixed time events are listed below in the Open Weekend Program. Please note that numbers are limited for some of these events and bookings are required for these events. 



Embassy of the Arab Republic of Egypt 
Open Weekend Program 
1 Darwin Avenue
Yarralumla  ACT 


Saturday 28 September, 2013

Tentmakers Hany El Sayed and Ekramy Hanafy will demonstrate throughout the day. 

An Arabic/English interpreter will be present at 12.00 - 1.00pm  each day, as noted below. 
During other times of the day, questions to the Tentmakers will be responded to 
as fully as is possible.

Due to practical constraints, access to the Embassy may be limited if needed.


9.00am                      Tentmakers Exhibition opens 

10.00am                    Full Open Weekend Program opens

12.00 - 1.00pm        Demonstration by Hany El Sayed and Ekramy Hanafy with   
                                   Arabic/English Interpreter present 
                                 
2.00 - 2.45pm           Introduction to the works and lecture by Jenny Bowker
                                    Bookings required

3.00pm                      Embassy closed to further entries


Sunday 29 September, 2013


Tentmakers Hany El Sayed and Ekramy Hanafy will demonstrate throughout the day. 

An Arabic/English interpreter will be present at 12.00 - 1.00pm  each day, as noted below. 
During other times of the day, questions to the Tentmakers will be responded to 
as fully as is possible. 

Due to practical constraints, access to the Embassy may be limited if needed.


9.00am                      Tentmakers Exhibition opens  

10.00am                    Full Open Weekend Program opens

12.00 - 1.00pm         Demonstration by Hany El Sayed and Ekramy Hanafy with
                                    Arabic/English Interpreter present

1.00 - 1.45pm            Children's Tent Pattern-making Workshop for ages 8 to 12 
                                     Bookings required

3.00pm                       Embassy closed to further entries  





History of the Tentmakers Art

More than 100 years ago, French archaeologist Gaston Maspero excavated a 21st Dynasty Egyptian tomb and found a tent made of leather, deemed to be one of the best surviving examples of the period. Egyptologist Villiers Stuart writing in 1882, chronicled the discovery of the funerary tent of Princess Isi em Khebs in The Funeral Tent of an Egyptian Queen.


Khan Khayamiah, the Tent Market
The ancient art of tentmaking continues today in the work of approximately 45 khayamin, the Egyptian makers of khayamiah or tents, living in Cairo in the Chareh El Khiamiah, the street of the tentmakers.

When translated into English, khayamiah is also spelled as khiamiah, khayamyah and khayamia.
 
The origins of the tentmakers art are multiple. The remains of an appliqued leather tent found in an excavated tomb was decorated with animals, flowers and a starred ceiling. Tents are shown in the Rameses panel at Abu Simbel.  Paul, Aquila and Priscilla were tentmakers of the 1st century, living and working their art together.  

The origins of the designs which Egyptian tentmakers draw from the Coptic period of 330BCE to the Islamic conquest of 641CE, with the exception of earlier Pharonic designs.  The term Copt is taken from the Arabic word quibt for Egyptian, later becoming the designated term for indigenous Egyptian Christians. 

Remnants of this period demonstrate the high level of textile skill in Egypt and a general tendency towards abstract and geometrical designs and highly stylised human forms. Persian influences are demonstrated in the presence of naturalistic fruit, flowers, birds and mythological figures.  Islamic influence commencing in the 7th century, saw a move away from figurative images and the development of richer abstract styles which incorporated elements of architectural decoration and which remain to the present day. 

Ottoman Period khayamgy at work
 The Mamluk Period  saw Islamic art flower, and the elements of Mamluk style remain a foundational influence in tentmaking decoration. The sinuous and methodical beauty of complex designs whose lines and curves repeat and interweave, draw from this period.  

The Ottoman Period saw the emergence of calligraphic decorations and the later style known as Mamluk Revival, or neo-Mamluk and sometimes Islamic Revival, many examples of which survive today. 

An extraordinary surviving example of a late Ottoman khayamiah is found in Doddington Hall UK, and is installed in the Hall as the Tent Room.   Dr Sam Bowker Lecturer in Art History and Visual Culture at Charles Sturt University Wagga Wagga draws the analogy of walking into a large tent such as this, with walking into a cathedral filled with light and colour.   The exterior may be monotonal, but the interior is richly, colourfully and glowingly decorative.  

A highly adaptable art, the central element of the tentmakers work is the flat panel or suradeq which presents a highly adaptable surface. Adapting to contemporary demands, the flat panel versus the whole tent, is now the main item of production. Where traditional fabric dyes included indigo, red and yellow madder and coccus beetle, the fabrics used today are dyed with modern synthetic dyes. Cotton fabrics dominate construction, however cotton-polyester blends are now included.

Interior with Egyptian Curtain, painted by Henri Matisse in 1948 shows a black, red, green and
Interior with Egyptian Curtain
yellow suradeq. Matisse is believed to have been influenced during this later period of his art by the bold coloured shapes in Egyptian tentmakers work and to have based his paper collage on the shapes and colours present in tentmaker work.


The growth of the travel industry in the late 19th century, the advent of photography and the enterprise of archeology all served to bring Egyptian arts, motifs and decorative styles to prominence and into everyday life.  Matisse's incorporation of a suradeq and his adaption of tentmaker imagery in his own work, is an example of this prominence that often passes unnoticed.

Tents which were the original source of the tentmakers art, are now produced as special commissions for Egyptian and Arab clients for weddings, gifts, holidays and receptions. Production of a tent can take up to 7 – 9 months. Each part of the tent is named as follows: the side or wall is known as the belma, the slope piece leading to the peak is the saket, the ceiling is the saqf and the canopied entrance is the sallabla.  


While the size and scope of the finished product has changed, the tentmakers of Cairo use traditional processes and artistic creativity to interpret and re-interpret established designs, producing unique pieces which continue this ancient art in the contemporary world. 

A 13th century manuscript depicting a scene with colourful tents in a range of styles

Additional Information