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Folk Art Market Helps Artists Preserve Traditions And Innovate For The Future

Friday 7/12 8:30a: The 16th annual runs July 12-14. It will feature more than 150 master artists from 50 countries. As of 2018, the Market has generated more than $31 million in earnings for artists. That can have a tremendous impact, especially for artists from developing countries. Those earnings often support families and build infrastructure for entire communities.

We talk with:

  • of the Kitengela Women Olmakau Cooperative from Kenya. They create jewelry, baskets  and sandals with traditional Maasai beadwork. They are attending the market under the auspices of . That’s a non-profit that works alongside the Kitengela community to develop income-producing activities to prevent the sale of land, which is so important to Maasai culture.
  • who comes from a long line of Zapotec weavers in Mexico. He is working to preserve those cultural traditions by using only natural dyes, rather than polluting chemical dyes that are now more commonly used. 
  • Rupa Trivedi is the founder of , a social enterprise in Mumbai that uses natural dyes often made from recycling flowers from temples as well as onions, coconuts and other plants to create vibrant cotton and silk textiles.
  • is creative director for the market, founder of and author of the new book “True Colors: World Masters of Natural Dyes and Pigments.”
Megan has been a journalist for 25 years and worked at business weeklies in San Antonio, New Orleans and Albuquerque. She first came to 91 as a phone volunteer on the pledge drive in 2005. That led to volunteering on Women’s Focus, Weekend Edition and the Global Music Show. She was then hired as Morning Edition host in 2015, then the All Things Considered host in 2018. Megan was hired as News Director in 2021.
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