Publication Date
1287 - 1314 AH / 1870 - 1896 AD
Publication Place
-
Rietberg Museum
Subject
Printed Cotton (Qalamkar), Lining: Printed Cotton (European Made), Copper, Silk Thread
Type
Other
Language
Undetermined
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
No
Physical Dimensions
الارتفاع: 53 سم، العرض: 207 سم
Library
Museum With No Frontiers
Library Asset ID
2010,67
Record ID
object;EPM;sw;Mus21;21;ar
Library Location
Rietberg Museum
Date
1287 - 1314 AH / 1870 - 1896 AD
Notes
After 1873, Iranian women of the upper classes wore a short skirt imitating the French tutu worn by ballerinas. Called his shawl, this small skirt was combined with a small jacket, kept above the waist so as not to spoil the puffy look of his shawl, with long sleeves worn over a thin shirt. As was customary at the time, the outer fabric was made of Persian qalamkar, a hand-woven interwoven printed fabric, while cheap European printed cotton fabrics were used for the lining, as was the custom. However, the two fabrics were not combined randomly, and it is clear from the interesting contrast that a lot of attention was paid to the selection of these two styles. The gothic grid structure that dominates Persian typography has a long tradition in Ottoman, Indian and Persian textile design, and was known even in the West. This jacket was acquired by the Swiss merchant Emil Albiger in Iran between 1870 and 1896. Albiger was then a director of the Manchester-based trading firm Ziegler & Co., which owned a carpet factory in Sultanabad.
Sample Text
Axel Langer "Women's Jacket" from Explore Islamic Art Collections. Museum Without Borders, 2026. https://islamicart.museumwnf.org/database_item.php?id=object;EPM;sw;Mus21;21;ar