
Cleveland Museum of Art
Headpiece
- Date
- 907–1125
- Medium
- embroidery, silk
- Culture
- China, Liao dynasty (907-1125)
- Department
- Textiles
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Pair of Headpieces Embroidery; silk Liao Dynasty (907-1125) The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Lisbet Holmes 1995.109.a and 1995.109.b (Cat. no. 52) These headpieces are embroidered with butterflies, birds, animals, flowers, leaves, and delicate vine scrolls. In general, the design is related to the theme of the lotus pond, best known from Liao tomb paintings. Paired ducks or geese swimming in water and looking in opposite directions seem to have become popular in the north of China before spreading further south and to Central Asia. On the other hand, recumbent animals looking back are a Central Asian image that migrated to northern China. Headpieces of this shape, intersected by two bands and secured by ties, have a long history in northern China. A gold replica was found in a tomb dating as early as ad 500-550.
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.

Pair of Headpieces
Cleveland Museum of Art

Headpiece
Cleveland Museum of Art

Birds on an Autumn Inlet
Cleveland Museum of Art

Embroidery with Birds
Cleveland Museum of Art

A Myriad of Birds
Cleveland Museum of Art

Pair of Boxes in Form of Lotus Leaves
Cleveland Museum of Art
Pair of Plaques with Profile Animal Heads
Art Institute of Chicago

Bowl with Ducks over Lotus Pond
Cleveland Museum of Art
Dish with Bird and Duck by Lotus Pond
Art Institute of Chicago

Woman's Robe
Cleveland Museum of Art

Box in Form of Lotus Leaf
Cleveland Museum of Art

Box in Form of Lotus Leaf (lid)
Cleveland Museum of Art