Lampas silk cushion cover

Cleveland Museum of Art

Lampas silk cushion cover

Date
early 1600s
Medium
lampas: silk and gilt-metal thread
Culture
Turkey, Istanbul or Bursa
Department
Textiles
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

Cushion covers, associated with comfort, were made especially to cover cushions placed on divans, the equivalent of sofas. Most were woven in brocaded velvet because the projecting pile could withstand abrasion more effectively than this rare brocaded silk example. Cushion covers typically display a row of six lappets (flaps or folds) across each end of a field decorated with either a repeating motif or a medallion pattern as shown here. Opulent gilt-metal thread forms the elegant minimalist pattern on a lustrous crimson silk ground. All the designs—the medallion and corner medallions, central rosette, and corner tulips, plus the lappets bearing rosettes—are outlined in silhouette.

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.