El
Bordado Colectivo
The Bordadoras de Isla Negra collective received an invitation to participate with a large-scale work to be installed at the entrance of the main convention hall of the UNCTAD III Conference building, which the Chilean State was constructing in Santiago.
This large tapestry would be part of the 38 works of art created by Chilean artists to be integrated into the new building, and it was to focus on the country’s natural production systems.
A chronicle of its history follows.
01.
Summer 1972, Isla Negra
Creation
With a limited timeframe and working against the clock, as the work had to be delivered by late March, a group of ten embroiderers made themselves available for this project.
AUTHORS
Rosa Santander
El mar y la caleta
(The sea and the cove)
Edulia Pérez & Tránsito Díaz Álvarez
Siega y trilla
(Mowing and threshing)
Adelaida Díaz
Rosas y flores
(Roses and flowers)
Purísima Ibarra
El campo de Graneros
(The countryside of Graneros)
Adela Ayala
El hogar
(The home)
Inés & Tránsito Díaz Espinoza
Central hidroeléctrica
(Hydroelectric plant)
Rosa Inés Ibarra
Vendimia
(Grape harvest)
Elsa Araya
Campamento de Sewell
Sewell camp
02.
April 1972, Santiago.
Installation and Inauguration of UNCTAD III
At the end of March 1972, once the large embroidery was finished, it was taken to Santiago and installed on the designated wall at the entrance to the main convention hall. The inauguration of the international event, attended by participants from all over the world, began its work alongside the final touches and the departure of workers, technicians, professionals, and volunteers of the human team that built this epic project in a record time of 275 days.
In May 1972, after the conference concluded, the building was transferred to the Ministry of Education. Thus, the Centro Cultural Metropolitano Gabriela Mistral (Metropolitan Cultural Center Gabriela Mistral) (CCMGM) was born, named in honor of the poet, with Irma Cáceres de Almeyda serving as its first director. For over a year, its spaces were occupied by social, student, and cultural organizations. El Bordado Colectivo remained installed, alongside the other works, as a grand textile mural, highly appreciated by all visitors to the cultural center.
03.
September1973, Santiago.
Disappearance
Following the coup d’état in 1973, during which La Moneda was bombed, the Military Junta installed itself in the UNCTAD III building as the seat of the new government; many of the building’s integrated artworks disappeared and their traces were lost.
One of those works was El Bordado Colectivo by the Bordadoras de Isla Negra, which remained missing for forty-seven years without any information regarding its condition or whereabouts.
04.
2019 - 2021, Santiago.
Silent Reappearance
The embroidery appeared in mid-2019, cut into four parts. Its authors were neither considered nor informed of this important news.
What followed was a long period of silence and closed-door negotiations to decide its ownership and future between the former Senator of the Republic, Guido Girardi, who held the work in his possession for many years, and the highest authorities of the Ministry of Culture at the time and the Gabriela Mistral Cultural Center (GAM).
The Isla Negra Foundation, which for decades has protected the work and authorship of the Bordadoras de Isla Negra, interceded on behalf of the creative artists and owners of El Bordado Colectivo. The restitution proposal was dismissed, and ultimately, its ownership resulted in a lack of transparency regarding the legal status held by the Chilean State, represented by the Ministry of National Assets, and a subsequent loan agreement to GAM.
Despite this, and thanks to the activities promoted by the foundation, El Bordado Colectivo began a journey of reunion with its creators and the public eye.
05.
May 2021, Isla Negra.
Reunion with its Authors
The foundation organized an emotional reunion between the embroiderers and their work in the winter of 2021, marking the end of the pandemic isolation. With the collaboration of GAM, the embroidery was moved to Isla Negra and spread out on the floor of a house, where the women arrived quietly, accompanied by close family members.
“This embroidery is part of our family stories, stories of community,” reflected the daughter of one of the embroiderers.
06.
December 2021 to March 2022, Paine.
08.
September 7 to November 5, 2023, GAM.
La Resistencia de una Espora. El Museo de la Solidaridad vuelve a GAM
El Bordado Colectivo was exhibited alongside more than 40 works from the collection of the Salvador Allende Solidarity Museum (MSSA) in the exhibition La Resistencia de una Espora. El Museo de la Solidaridad vuelve a GAM (The Resistance of a Spore. The Museum of Solidarity returns to GAM) at the GAM Visual Arts Gallery. This temporary exhibition was curated by the MSSA team in collaboration with GAM, highlighting the history of works that disappeared following the military coup and the subsequent recovery of some of them.
09.
December 8, 2023, to January 7, 2024, Pablo Neruda Museum Isla Negra.
First Exhibition: El Bordado Colectivo vuelve a casa y sale al mundo
As part of the foundation’s commitment to the Isla Negra community, the Isla Negra Foundation managed this exhibition, whose title translates to The Collective Embroidery Returns Home and Goes Out to the World, to bring the work back to its place of origin, marking a significant return to honor its authors
10.
2024, Venice, Italy.
60th Venice Biennale 2024
El Bordado Colectivo by the Bordadoras de Isla Negra was selected by Adriano Pedrosa, curator of the main exhibition of the 2024 Venice Biennale, to be included alongside other Chilean and foreign works in the exhibition titled Foreigners Everywhere. Installed in the Arsenale, the work was seen by thousands of people from all over the world between April and November 2024.
The Ministry of Culture and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs made the presentation of the large embroidery at the Biennale possible. The informative text that accompanied the work omitted the names of its authors and provided erroneous data regarding the context of the creation and production of the embroidery and the artists’ collective.
11.
May 31 2024, Pablo Neruda Museum House Isla Negra.
Recognition of the authors for the presentation of their work at the 60th Venice Biennale
By initiative of the foundation, the authors received official recognition for the participation of their work in the 60th version of the Venice Biennale. The Minister of Cultures, Arts, and Heritage, Carolina Arredondo, was present at the event.
12.
January 10 to March 23, 2025, Baburizza Palace Museum
Second Exhibition: El Bordado Colectivo vuelve a casa y sale al mundo
The foundation resumed the tour of this exhibition in the city of Valparaíso at the Baburizza Palace Museum. The show, which included biographies and the chronicle of the work, was inaugurated with the presence of some of the authors and embroiderers who traveled from Isla Negra. It was visited by more than 12,000 people during the summer of 2025.
13.
April to October 2025, Chile Pavilion, Osaka, Japan.
World Expo 2025 Osaka
Gonzalo Puga Larraín, designer and photographer, created a visual capsule featuring a subtle journey through objects, scenes, and trades that appear in El Bordado Colectivo. It was projected inside the Chile Pavilion to introduce the Japanese public to the rural customs and trades of the country through textile art, united by the Pacific.
14.
November 18 2025, Alberto Hurtado University, Santiago.
Talk: Las Bordadoras de Isla Negra en el horizonte de la UNCTAD III
Josefina de la Maza, an art historian, has collaborated with the foundation since 2019, specifically focusing on this major work. In this talk, she explored the historical context of El Bordado Colectivo in relation to the UNCTAD III summit. She also wrote the curatorial text for the exhibition El Bordado Colectivo Vuelve a Casa y Sale al Mundo in Isla Negra and Valparaíso and conducted comprehensive research for the forthcoming book on the history, work, and authorship of this artistic movement.
In view of the history described in this chronicle
Our reflection and stance challenge the citizens, the institutions, and the legal system of our country regarding the absence of the concepts of authorship and ownership in the actions taken regarding this work, from its disappearance until today.
Our purpose and ethical commitment to the authors is to achieve a legal and symbolic restitution of the work, restoring its dignity as an artistic creation.

























