Irmgard Weitlaner-Johnson (1914âÂÂ2011) was an American anthropologist who was an expert in Mexican textiles. She studied cultural anthropology and ethnographic textiles at the University of California, Berkeley.
Life and career
In July 1938, in Huautla de Jimenez, she and her husband, anthropologist Jean Bassett Johnson, along with Bernard Bevan and Louise Lacaud, were some of the first outsiders to witness and record a Mazatec healing ceremony where hallucinogenic psilocybin mushrooms (teonanacatl) were consumed.
Weitlaner-Johnson began her systematic study of Mexican textiles in 1951 and later became curator of textiles at Mexico's National Museum of Anthropology.
Selected works
Articles
- Weitlaner-Johnson, Irmgard & Rosario RamÃÂrez, "Indumentaria otopame en el Museo Nacional de AntropologÃÂa", ArqueologÃÂa Mexicana. No. 73, pp. 46âÂÂ51.
- Weitlaner-Johnson, Irmgard (1957). "Survival of feather ornamented huipiles in Chiapas, Mexico". Journal de la Société des Américanistes. Vol. 46, pp. 189âÂÂ196.
- Weitlaner-Johnson, Irmgard (1962). "Industrias y tejidos de Tuxpan, Jalisco, México." Anales del Instituto Nacional de AntropologÃÂa e Historia. Vol. 6, no. 14, pp. 149âÂÂ217.
- Weitlaner-Johnson, Irmgard (1960). "Un tzotzopatli antiguo de la región de Tehuacán". Anales Del Instituto Nacional De AntropologÃÂa E Historia, vol. 6, no. 11, pp. 75âÂÂ85.
Books
References
Further reading
- Vélez Calvo, R. (2016). "Una vida dedicada a los Textiles Mexicanos: Irmgard Weitlaner Johnson". Rutas De Campo, no. 1, pp. 47âÂÂ51.