Textile fragment with band of pseudo-inscription, leaf-shaped finials, and tendrils

On display

Details

  • Title

    Textile fragment with band of pseudo-inscription, leaf-shaped finials, and tendrils

  • Associated place

    Egypt (find spot)
    Fustat (possible) (possible find spot)
    Near East (place of creation)
  • Date

    late 11th century - mid-12th century
    Fatimid Period (AD 909 - 1171)
  • Material and technique

    linen, embroidered with coloured silk

  • Material index

  • Technique index

  • Object type

    towel
  • Dimensions

    21 x 6.5 cm (length x width)
    along length/width 14 / 18 threads/cm (thread count)
    ground fabric 0.05 cm max. (thread diameter)
    ground fabric 0.03 cm min. (thread diameter)
    additional fibre, embroidery 0.06 cm (thread diameter)
  • No. of items

    1

  • Credit line

    Presented by Professor Percy Newberry, 1941.

  • Museum location

    Lower ground floor | Gallery 5 | Textiles
  • Museum department

    Eastern Art

  • Accession no.

    EA1984.110

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  • Catalogue text

    A band is subdivided into panels with blue kufic ornamental writing with leaf finials, as well as fine, brown tendrils. At the bottom of the band is a narrow strip with single green leaves or birds.

    The couching is single thread; the buttonhole is worked over laid threads.

    In: Ellis, Marianne, Embroideries and Samplers from Islamic Egypt (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, in association with Greenville: Curious Works Press, 2001)

    This detail shows the repeating design from a late Fatimid embroidered band. For reasons not yet understood, the majority of tiraz textiles dating from the 11th century are tapestry-woven in silk. They are of a very high quality, and some are manufactured so skilfully that the yellow silk shimmers as if the cloth was made of gold thread. These woven examples became increasingly elaborate while calligraphy became less important and in some cases the letter forms became patterns with no meaning. This detail shows the repeating pattern from a 12th century, late Fatimid, band in which the forms are ultimately derived from Arabic characters. The vertical lines dividing areas of pattern into compartments relate back to tall kufic upstrokes and the little spoon-shaped curves along the lower edge are stylised versions of sublinear flourishes of certain letters. Within the smaller compartments S- and reverse S-shapes form patterns. Many of the later embroideries in the collection have band designs divided into compartments and S and Z shapes are frequently included in the designs. The collection in the Victoria and Albert Museum (London) has six fragments embroidered with similar designs suggesting that this is workshop rather than domestic production. The choice of stitches further supports this theory since they are ones that are economical both in time and thread. Possibly the bands decorated items of household linen, such as small towels, since one fragment is a complete width measuring 68 centimetres across from selvedge to selvedge.

    In: Barnes, Ruth and Marianne Ellis, ‘The Newberry Collection of Islamic Embroideries’, 4 vols, 2001, Oxford, Ashmolean Museum

Further reading

Barnes, Ruth and Marianne Ellis, ‘The Newberry Collection of Islamic Embroideries’, 4 vols, 2001, Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, vol. ii, vol. i

Ellis, Marianne, Embroideries and Samplers from Islamic Egypt (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, in association with Greenville: Curious Works Press, 2001), no. 6 on p. 18, p. 8, illus. p. 18

Reference URL

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