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Tush kyiz


Tush kyiz are large, elaborately embroidered wall hangings, traditionally made in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan by elder women to commemorate the marriage of a son or daughter.

Colors and designs are chosen to symbolize Kyrgyz traditions and rural life. Flowers, plants, animals, stylized horns, national designs and emblems of Kyrgyz life are often found in these ornate and colorful embroideries. Designs are sometimes dated and signed by the artist upon completion of the work, which may take years to finish. The Tush kyiz is hung in the yurt over the marriage bed of the couple, and symbolize their pride in their Kyrgyz tradition.

When Kyrgyzstan joined the Soviet Union in 1926, the people began to lead a more settled, less nomadic life, abandoning their yurt life for homes or apartments in town. In the summer, however, many would still take their yurts, shyrdaks and tush kyiz to the mountains where they would live during the warm summer months and graze their livestock. During the 63 years of Soviet rule, Kyrgyz women sometimes incorporated Soviet emblems into their tush kyiz to symbolize how Kyrgyzstan had embraced Soviet socialism and the idea of the proletariat.

The tush kyiz embroideries have been a family tradition among these mountain people for centuries, but among the last two generations of women, the tradition has almost completely died out. Modern women are more interested in developing worldly skills and have given up most handicrafts. Shyrdaks (felt rugs) are still being made because these have always been an item for sale to the general public. Tush kyiz, on the other hand, have always been created as a deeply personal family heirloom, symbolizing for a newly married couple their union with family, regional and national tradition.

Today, tush kyiz are found more often in museums than in family homes, as young people are abandoning traditional lifestyles. One tradition they are happy to leave behind is the marriage tradition of bride-stealing, where a young woman is kidnapped, taken to a man's family home and forced into marriage with him. The majority of Kyrgyz marriages are begun in this way, in deference to tradition. In part, the tush kyiz symbolizes deference to this and all Kyrgyz traditions — traditions which are giving way to more western ideas of personal choice.

Tush kyiz — and the lifestyle they symbolize — have fallen out of favor with the younger generations in Kyrgyzstan, and these magnificent embroideries are no longer being made. However, those that have been created by generations past are works of extraordinary beauty and craftsmanship and will always be honored as works of art.

Last updated: 05-18-2005 12:53:31