Blog
Welcome to mhcameo, the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum blog. Here we post about unique happenings, including behind-the-scenes looks at our exhibitions, close examinations of objects from the collection, and art-related chats with alumnae, faculty, and students. Sign-up below for blog alerts and take a regular peek at mhcameo!
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MHCAMEO_700.jpg
![mhcameo logo](https://artmuseum.mtholyoke.edu/sites/default/files/styles/image_1000_wide/public/images/MHCAMEO_700v2.jpg?itok=p4Oe6JFe)
Logo design by Taylor Anderson ('15)
![Jennifer Villa ’21, "Upon my back" series overview (2021). Fabric on blazers. 26 x18 in. The backs of 3 decorated blazers hung side by side.](https://artmuseum.mtholyoke.edu/sites/default/files/styles/image_large/public/jen_villa_21_1_1600w.jpg?itok=pvRc4tcM)
Jennifer Villa '21 describes the artistic influences that shaped her senior project, Upon my Back, and the process of its creation.
![Michelle Grabner and Tricia Y. Paik Michelle Grabner and Tricia Y. Paik](https://artmuseum.mtholyoke.edu/sites/default/files/styles/image_large/public/event_2017fa_lecture_sep14_10053-hpr.jpg?itok=u3oPr8nn)
Video recording
![Unknown artist (Navajo), Weaving with Yei figures, ca. 1935-40](https://artmuseum.mtholyoke.edu/sites/default/files/styles/image_large/public/mh_sk_k_104_v1_01-lpr_crop_0.jpg?itok=8Ft92xcm)
Relatively little is known about individual early 20th-century Navajo weavers and the creative and economic choices they made with their work. While the maker of MHCAM’s weaving with Yei figures remains unidentified, Lynda Teller Pete, a fifth-generation weaver from the Newcomb and Two Grey Hills areas of the Navajo Nation, shares her perspective on its origins, and the Navajo weaving tradition.