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Woman's cape (Paranja)

Woman's cape (Paranja)
(late 19th century)

Medium
silk, cotton, metal, dyes (warp ikat)

Measurements
152.0 cm (centre back) 122.0 cm (sleeve length)

Credit Line
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Purchased, 2006

Gallery location
Not on display

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About this work

Uzbek garments often feature boldly patterned, vividly coloured fabrics made using the resist-dyeing technique ikat. In Central Asia, a local term for ikat is abr, meaning ‘cloud’, a reference to the soft, slightly blurred edges surrounding the patterns. Fabrics were traditionally produced by men employed in family and guild-based workshops. Pattern designers, thread binders, dyers and weavers created specialist fabrics sold in the bazaars of Silk Road towns and cities, including Samarkand, Bukhara and Khiva. At home, many women reared silkworms to provide yarn and sewed garments for family members.

Artwork Details

Place/s of Execution
Bukhara, Uzbekistan

Accession Number
2006.269

Department
Asian Art

This digital record has been made available on NGV Collection Online through the generous support of The Gordon Darling Foundation