Length of Woven Silk
Returned to lender
This work of art was on loan to the museum and has since been returned to its lender.A small number of Chinese textiles were based on European “bizarre” silk designs. This example combines a sophisticated mélange of lush flora and fantastic architectural features—elements that periodically appeared in European silks from about 1695 to 1720. The gilt-paper-wrapped thread woven into the fabric is uniquely Chinese, but the cloth’s narrow loom width is the same as that of many eighteenth-century European dress silks. This is surprising because most Chinese export silks were woven on wider looms. Perhaps such silks, masquerading as European products, were made to circumvent the English and French bans on imported Asian silks enacted at the turn of the eighteenth century.
Artwork Details
- Title: Length of Woven Silk
- Date: 1710-1720
- Culture: China
- Medium: Silk satin, brocaded, gilt- and silver-paper-wrapped thread brocading
- Dimensions: 41 x 21.75 in (104.1 x 55.2 cm)
- Credit Line: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Helen and Alice Colburn Fund
- Curatorial Department: The American Wing