
Cleveland Museum of Art
Cloth of Gold with Rabbit Wheels
- Date
- c. 1225–50
- Medium
- Silk and gold thread: lampas
- Culture
- Eastern Iran
- Department
- Textiles
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Cloth of Gold with Rabbit Wheels Lampas; silk and gold thread Eastern Iranian world, about 1225-1260 The Cleveland Museum of Art, John L. Severance Fund 1993.140 (Cat. no. 45) The lavish amount of gold-used here for both the pattern and the background-reflects the extravagant taste of the Mongols. Known as "cloths of gold," such textiles were primarily woven for the official costumes of the Mongol court. Repeated roundels enclose four rabbits that share two pairs of ears and run in a circle. This motif, known as an animal wheel, is very ancient in Asia. Rabbits are commonly found on eastern Iranian metalwork dating from around 1200. Although the Mongol conquest of the Eastern Iranian world had taken place (1220-22), traditional silk patterns continued to be produced through the mid-1200s.
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.

Cloth of gold with winged lions and griffins
Cleveland Museum of Art

Cloth of gold with felines and eagles
Cleveland Museum of Art

Cloth of Gold: Displayed Falcons
Cleveland Museum of Art

Fragment with gold leaf lions
Cleveland Museum of Art

Velvet with gold discs
Cleveland Museum of Art

Exotic Gold-patterned Silk
Cleveland Museum of Art

Lampas with scenes of wild animals
Cleveland Museum of Art

Lampas with scenes of wild animals
Cleveland Museum of Art

Lampas with scenes of wild animals
Cleveland Museum of Art

Lampas with scenes of wild animals
Cleveland Museum of Art

Textile with Phoenixes and Dragons
Cleveland Museum of Art

Samite fragment with hunters
Cleveland Museum of Art