Prior to formal schooling, children between the ages of 5 and 10 in the small Coptic Christian village of Harrania, located at the foot of the Giza Pyramids, were selected to weave images created entirely in their mind’s eye. The joys of childhood fantasy came to life on their looms. The Egyptian Village, which up to 30 years ago had not known changes for 2000 years and had no source of income but farming, now prospers. Its tapestry artists are internationally famous and their work is prized throughout the world.
A Village Wedding, Karima Ali
A Herd of Camels, Fatma Awad
The Cairo Zoo, Ashrof Mohammed Moussa
exhibition
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09.12.15 - 12.06.15
An Accomplishment in Creativity
The Egyptian Children's Tapestries
Also at SVMA
09.20.25 - 01.04.26
Last West: Dorothea Lange’s California RevisitedA dynamic multimedia museum experience that explores how the work and legacy of America’s beloved documentary photographer of the 1930s-40s can help us understand the California we inherit today.
Dorothea Lange, Toward Los Angeles, California, 1937. Courtesy of U.S. Farm Security Administration. Image provided by the Library of Congress.more info