Pair of Boots

Cleveland Museum of Art

Pair of Boots

Date
1000–1125
Medium
Silk: compound twill; silk and gold: tapestry; silk: tabby, gauze, batting; leather
Culture
China, Northern, Liao dynasty (907-1125)
Department
Textiles
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

The fabric and tailoring of garments have always defined social status. For these boots, different outer fabrics were used: a patterned silk for the leg portion, and tapestry ( kesi ) for the foot. Since both were considered luxury fabrics, they were pieced together from remnants too precious to discard. Consequently, the silk pattern was not used in relation to the form of the boot. By contrast, these boots would have been made for a court official, not a member of the imperial family. The patterned silk was woven with geese flanking a vase of flowers on a stand and surrounded by cloud scrolls. The Chinese motif of flowers arranged in a vase was adopted by the Liao during the 11th century and indicates an 11th- or early 12th-century date for the boots.

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