
Cleveland Museum of Art
Man's Garment
- Date
- possibly early 1900s
- Medium
- Raffia palm fiber (Raphia ruffia or R. vinifera) and dye
- Culture
- Africa, West Africa, Côte d'Ivoire, Dida-style weavers and dyers
- Department
- Textiles
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Displayed flat to highlight its designs and preserve its delicate fibers, this wrapper was meant to drape around the body. An elite man wore it with one corner over a shoulder, the knotted fringe skimming his ankles. The garment gained its earth-toned geometric patterns through plangi, a knot-and-twist resist dyeing technique; each color is applied in a different dye bath, from lightest to darkest. While their patterns are unique, these garments reflect regional influence: Dida women likely learned hand interlacing from Liberian Kpelle weavers. Such garments were given as gifts or worn on special occasions, at least into the 1990s. The tying of fabric during the making of this garment gives its surface a distinctively "crinkled" texture.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
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