
Cleveland Museum of Art
Tampan Pasisir (Ship Cloth)
- Date
- 1800s
- Medium
- tabby weave with supplementary weft; cotton
- Culture
- Indonesia, Sumatra, Lampung, 19th century
- Department
- Textiles
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
For several hundred years, until early in the present century, textiles of this type played an essential, symbolic role in virtually every southern Sumatran ritual. Since there is no written mythological literature in Indonesia, the exact meaning of the "tampan pasisir" (as this ritual cloth is called) remains unknown. Nevertheless, this fine weaving must be a kind of narrative. Ships, of course, were essential to the life of these island people, and using one as an image for safe passage from one of life's stages to another seems plausible. This rare piece--few textiles of its age and condition from the tropical climes of Indonesia survive--was a most welcome gift to The Cleveland Museum of Art from the Textile Arts Club in honor of its 50th anniversary.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.
Ceremonial Textile (Tampan)
Art Institute of Chicago
Tampan (Ceremonial Cloth)
Art Institute of Chicago
Tampan (Ceremonial Cloth)
Art Institute of Chicago
Tampan (Ceremonial Cloth)
Art Institute of Chicago
Tampan (Ceremonial Cloth)
Art Institute of Chicago
Tampan (Ceremonial Cloth)
Art Institute of Chicago
Tampan (Ceremonial Cloth)
Art Institute of Chicago
Ceremonial Hanging (Palepai)
Art Institute of Chicago
Ceremonial Cloth (tampan)
Art Institute of Chicago
Ceremonial Hanging (Palepai)
Art Institute of Chicago
Ceremonial Hanging (palepai)
Art Institute of Chicago
Ritual Cloth with Prancing Horses (Tampan)
Art Institute of Chicago