Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of silk and rayon, stencill-printed warps (hogushi kasuri) plain weave; partially lined with cotton, plain weave.

Kimono

1920s/30s, Taishô period (1912–1926)/ Shôwa period (1926–1989)

Japan

Japan

Scrolling vines and either hollyhock or paulownia leaves with flowers climb across this kimono. Native to Japan, hollyhocks have long been associated with the Kamo Shrine and Aoi Festival in Kyoto, and they featured on the family creast of the Tokugawa shogunate. The paulownia, associated with the mythical phoenix of Chinese myths, has a long history in Japanese culture and is found in art and family creast.

Silk and rayon, stencill-printed warps (hogushi kasuri) plain weave; partially lined with cotton, plain weave

Textiles