Dec
09

‘Chawaytiri on the Road’

The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian recently launched “Chawaytiri on the Road,” a sustained research and documentary partnership with traditional Quechua authorities in the Andean villages near Pisaq, Peru.

Near Chawaytiri, Peru, November 2010. (Photo by Kevin Cartwright)

Near Chawaytiri, Peru, November 2010. (Photo by Kevin Cartwright)

In November, museum research scholar José Barreiro and a film crew trekked over nearly 60 miles of Andean roads with a caravan of men, women and children from Chawaytiri, a Quechua-speaking community of weavers and herders. For two weeks the team recorded and documented the community’s pilgrimage of remembrance.

Kevin Cartwright, a media producer at the museum, directed the crew and captured groundbreaking images of traditional Andean cultural practices. “What’s new about this footage is that we have been following the community’s lead,” Cartwright said. “Rather than deriving images from staged contexts, this project has really been driven by the people themselves.”

Community of Chawaytiri on the Antisuyo Inca Road. Peru, November 2010. (Photo by Kevin Cartwright)

Community of Chawaytiri on the Antisuyo Inca Road. Peru, November 2010. (Photo by Kevin Cartwright)

Ceremonial offerings to the mountains and Pachamama (Mother Earth) were conducted for the pilgrimage and captured on film as part of the elders’ wish to preserve and spread the spiritual and agricultural traditions of the indigenous Andes. The Chawaytiri project will inform the museum’s upcoming exhibition on the Inka, but its overall mission is much broader. During a trip to the region in August 2009, Barreiro and Ramiro Matos (Quechua), a curator and archaeologist at NMAI, were invited to a sacred site previously known only to the native community.  Since then, the site—an ancient “tambo” or “tampu,” one of the way stations along the Inka roads—has been granted official recognition by the Peruvian government. “Through these partnerships, we’re building trust with the local community while learning about and preserving ancient archaeological sites,” Barreiro said.

To learn more about the project, visit NMAI’s blog.

Men of Chawaytiri, Peru playing music during the Llama Tinkay ceremony. Near Chawaytiri, Peru, November 2010. (Photo by Kevin Cartwright)

Men of Chawaytiri, Peru playing music during the Llama Tinkay ceremony. Near Chawaytiri, Peru, November 2010. (Photo by Kevin Cartwright)

Men of Chawaytiri, Peru performing Ch’uncho dance. Near Chawaytiri, Peru, November 2010. (Photo by Kevin Cartwright)

Men of Chawaytiri, Peru performing Ch’uncho dance. Near Chawaytiri, Peru, November 2010. (Photo by Kevin Cartwright)


Posted: 9 December 2010
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