Gentlenoise
Gentle Noise
Playing with the small, knitted swatch of alpaca wool in my hand, I lost
track of time. The small piece of textile had become a riddle for me. The
swatch was made up of rice stitches overlaid with a large diamond shape
that formed a braided design. I kept feeling the weave, the tautness of each
knot, rubbing my fingers
back and forth. But at first my touch was blind
to the culture and craft of the artisan’s work. It would take me months to
learn to feel the material qualities of alpaca wool, to appreciate the knowledge
conveyed through touch. The knitted surface was as important
as the design; it interlaced sociocultural negotiations, histories, and layers of
meaning (Alvarez Astacio 2015). To appreciate the density of this surface,
I had to learn a different form of touch that could recognize the ontological
complexity of this material surface. At the very least, I need to recognize
the gap between my own conditioned tactility and that which is materialized
in alpaca textiles.