1700 / 1800, Kyoto

1700 / 1800, Kyoto

Identifier
T.46-1955
Acquisition
Given by the Misses Alexander through Art Fund
Collection
Technique
Depiction
Dimension
140.5 cm (length)
138 cm (width)
Production time
Production place
Type of object

Description

This panel was originally part of a costume worn by an actor in a Nô performance. Nô is a traditional Japanese dance drama with a poetic text that is sung to the accompaniment of three drums and a flute. All the performers are male, and the actor in the leading role wears a mask. The costumes are heavy and stiff. Their emphatic designs suit the slow, deliberate movements of a Nô performance, which takes place on a virtually bare stage. This panel would have been part of a costume known as a‘karaori’; it would have been worn by an actor playing a female role. The pattern of chrysathemums, pine shoots, bellflowers and bushclover has been woven with long floating wefts that look almost like embroidery. Panel of silk, made from several rectangular panels of brocaded silks of various sizes. The pattern, which consists of a close arrangement of floral motifs (including pine shotts, chrysanthemums, bush clover and bellflowers), is the same on each panel, but two different colour schemes are used. The ground of one group is greeen shaded to a rust colour and the other is green shaded to cream. The panel is brocaded in blues, greens, white, orange and mauve and has some gold thread. It is backed with purple silk. Panel of brocaded silk, Kyoto, Japan. 1700-1800