Dress fabric

İsim Dress fabric
Yazar Unknown Unknown (designed and made by)
Basım Tarihi: 1500
Basım Yeri Iran (made) -
Konu Figures Servant Cypress Trees Blossom Lion Leopard Fish Birds Gazelle Men
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Kütüphane: Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası 282A-1906
Kayıt Numarası 282A-1906
Lokasyon Middle East Section
Tarih 1500
Notlar Woven silk dress fabric depicting a man with bottle and cup in a landscape with trees, animals and fishpond, in 1.3 twill on a satin ground, Iran, 16th century.
Malzemeler ve teknikler Woven silk in 1.3 twill on a satin ground Silk Weaving
Parçalar Woven Silk, Woven Silk, Woven Silk, Woven Silk, Woven Silk, Woven Silk
Fiziksel açıklama Silk woven in the lampas technique (1/3 twill on a satin ground). The pattern shows an idealised landscape inhabited by a single human figure and a variety of birds and animals. There are two cypress trees in each repeat, one paired with a flowering fruit tree. A rocky outcrop rises beside a pool with fish, which is hemmed with grass. There is also a scattering of small plants and stones. To the left of the lone cypress stands the figure of a beardless youth equipped for serving wine, with a slender-necked bottle and a drinking-bowl. He wears a short-sleeved outer robe that ends just above the ankle. It is gathered at the waist by a belt, and the central opening is fastened above the waist. Beneath the robe, the youth wears a long-sleeved garment of the same length but of a contrasting colour. The youth’s head is covered by a felt cap with a high central baton-like extension, mostly hidden by a turban cloth. He also wears an ear-ring in his right ear. The animals include two large and colourful birds; one flies in front of the lone cypress tree, while the second is apparently resting on the ground behind the other cypress. The remaining beasts are a lion, a leopard and a gazelle, as well as two fish. The two predators and their prey behave in an uncharacteristic manner – the gazelle lies on the ground, alert but unconcerned by the leopard, which lies nearby, partly obscured by the rocky outcrop, while the lion lies peacefully by the pool, apparently gazing at the fish with no intention of catching them. Other examples of silks with this pattern (see below) all show the same range of weft colours (red, blue, green, yellow, white and black), but this range seems to have been modified by fading in the case of these fragments. The whole group is remarkable for the manner in which changes in colourway were achieved by alternating the weft colours in each register of the repeat, allowing the weaver to produce the same complex design in multiple colour variations. Such variations, introduced register by register, occur in these fragments, but have been muted by fading.
Kaynağa git Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru
Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru Victoria and Albert Museum

Dress fabric

Yazar Unknown Unknown (designed and made by)
Basım Tarihi 1500
Basım Yeri Iran (made) -
Konu Figures Servant Cypress Trees Blossom Lion Leopard Fish Birds Gazelle Men
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Kütüphane Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası 282A-1906
Kayıt Numarası 282A-1906
Lokasyon Middle East Section
Tarih 1500
Notlar Woven silk dress fabric depicting a man with bottle and cup in a landscape with trees, animals and fishpond, in 1.3 twill on a satin ground, Iran, 16th century.
Malzemeler ve teknikler Woven silk in 1.3 twill on a satin ground Silk Weaving
Parçalar Woven Silk, Woven Silk, Woven Silk, Woven Silk, Woven Silk, Woven Silk
Fiziksel açıklama Silk woven in the lampas technique (1/3 twill on a satin ground). The pattern shows an idealised landscape inhabited by a single human figure and a variety of birds and animals. There are two cypress trees in each repeat, one paired with a flowering fruit tree. A rocky outcrop rises beside a pool with fish, which is hemmed with grass. There is also a scattering of small plants and stones. To the left of the lone cypress stands the figure of a beardless youth equipped for serving wine, with a slender-necked bottle and a drinking-bowl. He wears a short-sleeved outer robe that ends just above the ankle. It is gathered at the waist by a belt, and the central opening is fastened above the waist. Beneath the robe, the youth wears a long-sleeved garment of the same length but of a contrasting colour. The youth’s head is covered by a felt cap with a high central baton-like extension, mostly hidden by a turban cloth. He also wears an ear-ring in his right ear. The animals include two large and colourful birds; one flies in front of the lone cypress tree, while the second is apparently resting on the ground behind the other cypress. The remaining beasts are a lion, a leopard and a gazelle, as well as two fish. The two predators and their prey behave in an uncharacteristic manner – the gazelle lies on the ground, alert but unconcerned by the leopard, which lies nearby, partly obscured by the rocky outcrop, while the lion lies peacefully by the pool, apparently gazing at the fish with no intention of catching them. Other examples of silks with this pattern (see below) all show the same range of weft colours (red, blue, green, yellow, white and black), but this range seems to have been modified by fading in the case of these fragments. The whole group is remarkable for the manner in which changes in colourway were achieved by alternating the weft colours in each register of the repeat, allowing the weaver to produce the same complex design in multiple colour variations. Such variations, introduced register by register, occur in these fragments, but have been muted by fading.
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