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Shoulder cloth (ija sawa), or waist cloth

approx. 1850-1900

Asian Art Museum

Asian Art Museum
San Francisco, United States

Imagine a bride, her back toward you, her torso wrapped in fine purple silk, with the shimmering tail of her shawl falling down her back. Only one end of this over four-meter-long cloth is on view, but both are ornamented in gold with tall triangular motifs that in Aceh are called puncak rebung or bamboo shoot motifs. Bamboo is a source of food as it initially forms edible sprouts, and then transforms into an invaluable source of building material as it grows taller.
Chinese reports describe silk production in Aceh in northern Sumatra from as early as the tenth century. The introduction of gold-thread supplementary-weft weaving may have occurred in the sixteenth century, when the region formed diplomatic relations with the Ottoman Empire. The word for this technique in Aceh could derive from an Arabic term for embroidery and has a lovely translation, “rough as dew,” describing both the raised surface of the gold threads and their reflective surfaces.

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  • Title: Shoulder cloth (ija sawa), or waist cloth
  • Date Created: approx. 1850-1900
  • Location Created: Indonesia; Aceh province
  • Physical Dimensions: H. 29 in × W. 167 1/4 in, H. 73.7 cm × W. 424.8 cm
  • Rights: Public Domain
  • Medium: Silk, metal-wrapped threads, and dyes
  • Credit Line: Asian Art Museum, Gift of Joan and M. Glenn Vinson, Jr., 2018.120
Asian Art Museum

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