Description
The coat’s outer fabric is woven in five brilliant colors featuring paired ducks in pearl roundels, hallmarks of the precious and highly desired silks from Sogdia. The coat’s inner lining is a twill damask with a floral pattern made in China. The combination of Sogdian and Chinese silks in one garment with Tibetan ownership history is evidence of the vital exchange and cultural interaction among the peoples living along the trade routes of the Silk Road.
This precious coat was presumably made for a Tibetan prince. Given the coat’s pristine condition, though, it is unclear whether the garment was ever worn, or was used as a diplomatic gift or perhaps as currency.
This precious coat was presumably made for a Tibetan prince. Given the coat’s pristine condition, though, it is unclear whether the garment was ever worn, or was used as a diplomatic gift or perhaps as currency.
Provenance
(Sara Tremayne, Ltd., London, UK, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (?-1996); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1996-)
Accession Number
1996.2.1
Medium
Silk: weft-faced compound twill weave (samite)
Dimensions
width across shoulders: 84.5 cm (33 1/4 in.); length back of neck to hem: 51.4 cm (20 1/4 in.)
Classification
Garment
Credit Line
Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund