The Art Institute of Chicago
Spider-Silk Textile

A Golden Spider-Silk Textile
June 3–November 6, 2011
Gallery 137

Overview: Strands of silk from over one million of Madagascar’s golden orb spiders (Nephila
madagascariensis
) were woven together to make this dazzling textile, the only one
of its kind in the world. Completed in 2008, the panel’s story underscores the globalism that is characteristic of many textile genres in Africa. Created by Simon Peers and Nicholas Godley, the loan of this rare textile celebrates the opening of the Art Institute's redesigned galleries of African art and Indian art of the Americas.

Panel (Lamba Akotifahana)
Panel (Lamba Akotifahana), 2008. Madagascar. Seven panels joined: spider silk, plain weave with supplementary brocading wefts and patterning warps.

The idea of harnessing spider silk for weaving is an age-old dream that was first
attempted in a methodical way in France in the early 18th century. In the 1880s,
Father Paul Camboué, a French Jesuit priest, brought the dream to Madagascar.
Intrigued by the strength and beauty of the silk produced by the island’s golden orb
spider, he began to collect and experiment with it. In 1900 a set of bed hangings
was woven from spider silk at Madagascar’s Ecole Professionelle and exhibited at
the Exposition Universelle in Paris (today the whereabouts of those hangings are
unknown). But the idea of creating an industry that could compete with Chinese
silk (produced from silkworms) proved unrealistic.

In 2003 partners Simon Peers and Nicholas Godley, longtime residents of Madagascar,
revived the spider-silk dream. They assembled a team of over 80 women and men
with local knowledge of spiders and weaving to work on the project. It took them
five years—and a good deal of trial and error, invention, and perseverance—to
gather the spider silk and weave this cloth in the elaborate textured patterns of a
lamba akotifahana, a 19th-century luxury textile of Madagascar’s Merina people.

Spider silk has extraordinary properties. It is one of the strongest materials in the
natural world and has remarkable elasticity. Scientists today are researching potential
uses for spider silk in the medical and military arenas, including artificial tendons,
surgical thread, and bulletproof clothing. However, attempts to replicate the complex
processes that take place in a spider’s spinnerets in order to produce artificial spider
silk are proving extremely difficult.

Watch a 10-minute video on the history and creation of the spider-silk textile.


 
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