Coming from a family with a long tradition of handicrafts, David Laura is an artisan in textiles. He was born in in 1945 in Ayacucho, a city that, along with being the cradle of superior pottery, also possesses enormous prestige for its exuberant textile art represented...
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Coming from a family with a long tradition of handicrafts, David Laura is an artisan in textiles. He was born in in 1945 in Ayacucho, a city that, along with being the cradle of superior pottery, also possesses enormous prestige for its exuberant textile art represented in tapestries and rugs of singular design and color. With his family, David has a workshop dedicated to textiles, making his own name and reputation in this branch of Peruvian art.
"My grandparents and parents were textile artisans, having cultivated this art from their predecessors, so my formation was essentially learned through observation. Nevertheless I have taken textile courses on various occasions. My work deals with resuscitating our ancestral culture and linking it to the present while at the same time fulfilling a longing that I feel. I work in my workshop with my family and it is a full-time dedication. Through my art I want to reveal the Andean people and our capacity to redeem the past.
"In my work I employ very select materials - my textile base is composed of sheep's wool (95%) and cotton (5%), complemented by both natural and industrial dyes. As tools I use a loom, which consists of a big wooden table designed for this type of work, and also combs and winding frames. Before weaving the tapestry I draw the design on paper so it serves as a guide; before copying it on the wool and cotton I complete the warping chain. During the weaving process I can change the design when it occurs to me that it can improve by moving the figures. To obtain a wide spectrum of colors I combine natural and industrial dyes to obtain excellent tones. Finally I cut the borders and knot them so they don't come undone. My colors maintain their vivacity throughout time, in fact, the natural dyes are eternal. I'd like to mention that for the natural dyes, we ourselves cultivate the plants (walnut, tare, molle and alder). Generally I participate in regional fairs and sometimes in the capital.
"To the clients of Novica I'd like to say that my work, in addition to its quality, is representative of my people and expresses the culture of my country, and each piece is original and one of a kind."