Towel End
c. 1700s–1800s
Maker Unknown
Textiles
Towel End, c. 1700s–1800s. Russia, Nizhny-Novgorod province, 18th-19th century. Cotton or linen (est.) straight (continuous) bobbin lace (Vologda tape lace). The tape forms figural or plant motifs outlined with gimp (heavy cord) with a monochrome plaited ground (metal thread or linen (est.) linking the tape; applied silk (est.) and metal thread ribbon; overall: 35.5 x 46 cm (14 x 18 1/8 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 1931.104 This Russian lace panel was likely used to embellish the end of a bathing towel. Textiles of this type are valuable for their fine embroidery or lacemaking that included ancient folk motifs, ritual significance, exemplification of the role of textiles in their society, and in this case, connection to a prominent woman collector, Natalia de Shabelsky, without whom this textile and others like it might have been lost. Embellishing the ends of everyday towels was a common folk tradition in many cultures because it displayed the skill of the mother or daughter who stitched them.
- Maker/Artist
- Maker Unknown
- Classification
- Lace
- Formatted Medium
- cotton or linen (est.) straight (continuous) bobbin lace (Vologda tape lace). The tape forms figural or plant motifs outlined with gimp (heavy cord) with a monochrome plaited ground (metal thread or linen (est.) linking the tape; applied silk (est.) and metal thread ribbon
- Medium
- cotton, linen, est, straight, continuous, bobbin, lace, vologda, tape, forms, figural, plant, motifs, outlined, gimp, heavy, cord, monochrome, plaited, ground, metal, thread, linking, applied, silk, ribbon
- Dimensions
- Overall: 35.5 x 46 cm (14 x 18 1/8 in.)
- Departments
- Textiles
- Accession Number
- 1931.104
- Credit Line
- Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund
- Rights Statement
- CC0
Have a concern, a correction, or something to add?