Buddhist Priest's Robe (Kesa) with Scrolling Floral
Japanese
A Buddhist priest's robe known in Japan as a kesa (Sanskrit, kasaya), this rectangular garment is made up of mulitple pieces of the same cloth that together form a unified assemblage of rectangles and squares framed within a border. The fabric is a very dark blue silk with a design of densely packed flowers and vines brocaded in gold. Four square patches made of a contrasting salmon-colored silk decorated with gold designs of phoenixes flying amid clouds appear in the four corners, just inside the robe's rectangular border. Termed "shiten," these four corner patches are said to represent the Buddhist Guardians of the Four Directions (Shitennō).
Dark blue silk with "kinran" gold brocade; selected elements made of orange silk with supplementary gold wefts
Edo period, 1615-1868