Noh Costume (Karaori) with Dharma Wheels and Clouds
Returned to lender
This work of art was on loan to the museum and has since been returned to its lender.This Noh robe, or karaori, was inspired by sophisticated, layered patterns seen on early seventeenth-century examples. Here colorful dharma wheels referring to the act of teaching by Buddha Shakyamuni and auspicious clouds are set on a ground of interlinked circles (shippō) with stylized flowers in the center, a felicitous pattern. Both the raised patterns and the golden-brown ground motifs are woven with floating supplementary wefts on a dark green twill-weave ground in a technique also known as karaori (literally “Chinese weave”). The term originally referred to luxurious brocaded silks with supplementary weft patterning imported from China. Later, the same term came to refer to Noh robes for which the brocaded fabric was used. Though karaori were worn for women’s and young noblemen’s roles, this costume likely served as a man’s inner garment, as Buddhist implements such as dharma wheels are typically considered masculine.
Artwork Details
- 青竹色地輪宝瑞雲模様唐織
- Title: Noh Costume (Karaori) with Dharma Wheels and Clouds
- Period: Edo period (1615–1868)
- Date: mid-18th century
- Culture: Japan
- Medium: Twill-weave silk with silk supplementary weft patterning
- Dimensions: 62 × 53 1/2 in. (157.5 × 135.9 cm)
- Classification: Costumes
- Credit Line: Lent by John C. Weber Collection
- Curatorial Department: Asian Art