Panel of Chintz for a Woman's Skirt

Art Institute of Chicago

Panel of Chintz for a Woman's Skirt

Made in India possibly for the Dutch or Latin American market

Date
1730-50
Medium
Cotton, plain weave; hand painted and dyed
Culture
India
Department
Textiles
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

Starting in the early 1600s Portuguese traders brought Indian hand-dyed fabrics to Europe, where the Hindi name for them, chint , became chintz . During this same period, Spanish conquests in the Western Hemisphere led to direct trade between Asia and the Americas. This lively patterned chintz displays scrolls and flowers typical of a European design vocabulary as well as tiny scenes of animals and hunters. It exemplifies the creative designs that captivated global consumers and may have been made for the Dutch market, although it could equally have been worn by a woman in New Spain in the 1700s.

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Object type
AAT300014063

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