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Shindo, Hiroyuki. Untitled, 1990. Cotton: indigo-dyed, Diameter: 19.1 cm (7 1/2 in.). Bequest of Camille and Alex Cook, 2022.80. Copyrighted.

Untitled

1990

Hiroyuki Shindo

Hiroyuki Shindo (Japanese, 1941-)

Textiles

Untitled, 1990. Hiroyuki Shindo (Japanese, 1941-). Cotton: indigo-dyed; diameter: 19.1 cm (7 1/2 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Bequest of Camille and Alex Cook 2022.80 The method of indigo dyeing is a centuries-old Japanese tradition, and the artist Hiroyuki Shindo is internationally known for his artwork that utilizes this ancient tradition in contemporary forms. He uses a natural dye process that begins with the harvesting the plants. In the case of the thread balls, he uses a resist dying technique on different size balls that results in an array of organic designs and levels of saturation. By showing the thread balls in groups, it displays the individualism of each hand-made iteration. The artist often exhibits these balls in groups, directly on the floor.
Maker/Artist
Shindo, Hiroyuki
Classification
Textile
Formatted Medium
Cotton: indigo-dyed
Dimensions
Diameter: 19.1 cm (7 1/2 in.)
Departments
Textiles
Accession Number
2022.80
Credit Line
Bequest of Camille and Alex Cook
Rights Statement
Copyrighted

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