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Garment

Creator Name

--

Cultural Context

Africa, North Africa, Egypt, Aswan, unidentified makers

Date

Creation: c. 1890s

About the Work

Cleveland Museum of Art Object Description
Covered with symbolic decorations, this multitone silk garment beautified and protected its wearer. The khamsah (خمسة)—an open five-fingered hand—figures prominently as a cream-colored appliqué. The khamsah deflected or absorbed al-'ayn (العين‎)—the evil eye—as did the appliquéd mirrors, shielding the wearer from many varieties of harm. New research connects this garment to an entry in museum founder J. H. Wade’s 1881–1900 travel purchase notebook: “Kalifa’s gown emb[roidered] on purple silk.” A caliph (or khalifah) is a leader of a Caliphate (Islamic state) or an Islamic religious group. Whether this was indeed a caliph’s gown is a point of future research.

Work details

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Title

Garment

Creator

--

Worktype

Garment

Cultural Context

Africa, North Africa, Egypt, Aswan, unidentified makers

Material

Silk, mirrored glass

Dimensions

Overall: 132.1 x 63.5 x 30.5 cm (52 x 25 x 12 in.);
height: 1.321metre;
width: 0.635metre;
depth: 0.305metre

Technique

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Language

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Date

Creation: c. 1890s

Provenance

Jeptha Homer Wade II [1857-1926] and Ellen Garretson Wade [1859-1917], Cleveland, OH, gifted to the Cleveland Museum of Art, 1916; The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH, 1916-; Gift of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Wade

Style Period

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Rights

Curationist Logo
CC0
CC0

Inscription

--

Location

--

Subjects

--

Topic

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Related Content

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All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:

Garment, c. 1890s, Cleveland Museum of Art. CC0.

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