
Idyllwild Arts is honored to welcome Diné master weavers and sisters Barbara Teller Ornelas and Lynda Teller Pete for their 28th year teaching in the summer program. This Level II workshop offers a more in-depth experience ideal for beginning weaving students as well as more advanced students who have projects they may need troubleshooting with or completing.
June 16 – 20, 2025
One week session
Friday, June 20, 2025
Parks Exhibition Center @ 4:00 PM
18+
$1,820
$980
$20
$50
Intermediate
Enrollment is limited to 12 students
Learn the art of weaving from master Navajo weavers Barbara Teller Ornelas and Lynda Teller Pete, originally from Two Grey Hills and Newcomb, NM. While instructing and demonstrating, sisters Barbara and Lynda will share their family’s personal weaving stories and experiences, offering you a distinctive view into the world of Navajo lifeways and weaving.
Intermediate: If you have taken the course or have basic Navajo weaving training on an upright loom, you will explore more advanced techniques and patterns, and your rug may be any size. Bring weavings from previous summers to complete or begin a new rug. You must bring your own loom and set it up for weaving before class begins. You may also order a pre-warped loom when registering online. This session, as well as the advanced session, includes a special lesson on warping. You may enroll for the entire three weeks or only the second week.
Dyeing Your Wool: Special Treat for Week II / Intermediate and Week III / Advanced Weaving Students!
With plenty of sunshine in Idyllwild, we will employ a technique called Solar Dyeing. Utilizing wool tincture dyes, a mixture of citric acid and natural dyes. This easy-to-manage process is fast, simple, tidy, and safe. All supplies and equipment are provided with a $20 supplies fee when registering online.
We offer three different classes (levels I, II and III) to accommodate all skill levels. You are invited to enroll in the class (or classes) that best fits your skill level.
Barbara Jean Teller Ornelas is a fifth-generation Master Navajo Weaver and culture bearer, raised near the famed Two Grey Hills Trading Post on the Navajo Nation. Her father, Sam Teller was a Navajo trader for thirty-two years, and her mother, Ruth Teller, was a weaver, gardener, quilter and photographer. When Teller Ornelas was ten, her paternal grandmother dreamt that she would become a great weaver who shared their traditions around the world. Fifty-six years later, Teller Ornelas has not only honed her artistry as a Two Grey Hills weaver but shared it with audiences internationally in the form of workshops, lectures, and exhibitions. For Teller Ornelas, weaving is a living thing, she uses her weavings to tell stories—a legacy passed down by her great-grandfather, a Keeper of Stories who was a prisoner of war at Bosque Redondo after the U.S. military forcibly relocated the Navajo people in 1863. Teller Ornelas is herself a survivor of two U.S. government residential schools—institutions which aimed to eradicate Navajo culture. In the face of this, she has dedicated her life to preserving and innovating Navajo weaving. Her designs reference both her matrilineal traditions and lived experience. As a teacher, she has shared her knowledge with students from Arizona to Peru and Oaxaca, to Uzbekistan, to Kyrgyzstan, building solidarity with other indigenous peoples. In 2023, Barbara became a US Artist fellow. Today, her mission is to connect Navajo people in her own cultural ecosystem with their heritage by passing on this crucial ancestral knowledge and nurturing new generations of Navajo weavers.
Diné tapestry weaver Lynda Teller Pete was born into the Tábąąhá (Water Edge Clan) and born for the Tó’aheedlíinii (Two Waters Flow Together Clan). Originally from the Two Grey Hills, Newcomb, NM area of the Diné Nation. She lives in Denver with her husband Belvin Pete. Weaving is a legacy in the Teller family. For over seven generations, her family has produced award-winning rugs in the traditional Two Grey Hills regional style. Along with her weaving, Lynda is collaborating with fiber art centers, museums, universities, fiber guilds and other art venues to educate the public about Diné history and the preservation of Diné weaving traditions. Lynda and her sister Barbara wrote Spider Woman’s Children, Navajo Weavers Today in 2018. This book is the first book written about Diné weavers by Diné weavers since the time of Spanish and colonial contacts. Their second book How to weave a Navajo rug and other lessons from Spider Woman published in 2020. Lynda has also collaborated with three authors on the book, Navajo Textiles: The Crane Collection at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science in 2016. Lynda has a Bachelor of Science degree in Criminal Justice in Public Programs from Arizona State University. She is also a 2022-2023 Luce Indigenous Knowledge Fellow and has an elected Board of Director position with the Textile Society of America for 2020-2025. Lynda has been selected for the 2024 School of Advanced Research’s Rollin and Mary Ella King Native Artist Fellowship in Santa Fe, NM.
Includes wool and use of tools.
Optional: Pre-warped loom for an additional $80
Optional:
Your workshop starts at 9 a.m. each day. Lunch is served from 12 to 1 p.m. Workshops resume at 1 p.m. and wrap up at 4 p.m. Dinner is served from 5 to 7 p.m. You are welcome to join evening programming led by other adult art programs.
NOTE: Some instructors allow for after-hour work sessions. If the instructor(s) is/are willing and present in the classroom, you can work on your pieces after 4 pm.
Generous donors have made scholarships and fellowships for adult workshops available on a limited basis for these specific groups:
1) Native American Community Leaders, Artists, Members, and Teachers.
2) Inland Empire Teachers, Professors, and graduate students.
Scholarships include tuition, dorm housing, and all meals provided by the campus dining service. Transportation to and from campus is not provided, and the $50 registration fee is not included.
Scholarship Details:
1) Native American Community Members, Leaders, Artists, and Teachers
For adults 18 and older with current tribal affiliation, the scholarship brings community leaders, artists, members, and teachers to workshops at Idyllwild Arts to benefit both the scholarship recipients and those in their schools or tribal communities. Applicants with financial needs may receive priority. We also offer scholarships for Native American Teens for both the Summer Program and the Academy.
2) Inland Empire Teachers, Professors, and graduate students
For adults 18 and older who are current teachers in lower and higher education who will benefit from learning about Native American Arts and Culture to take back into the classroom as well as currently enrolled graduate students. The scholarship is designed to provide professional development for those in education to share with their learning communities.
Click here for more information about adult scholarships.
Learn the art of weaving from master Navajo weavers Barbara Teller Ornelas and Lynda Teller Pete, originally from Two Grey Hills and Newcomb, NM. While instructing and demonstrating, sisters Barbara and Lynda will share their family’s personal weaving stories and experiences, giving you a view into the world of Navajo weaving.
Explore the fundamentals of working with hot glass, guided by an award-winning glass artist, Ramson Lomatewama. Ramson's glass art is viewed as a "contemporary expression of an ancient and artistically rich people…evoking a beautiful yet humbling mindscape which we all long to find."