Woman's Skirt

Cleveland Museum of Art

Woman's Skirt

Date
late 1800s–about 1906–12
Medium
Raffia palm fiber (Raphia ruffia or R. vinifera) and dye
Culture
Africa, Central Africa, Democratic Republic of Congo, Mbuun-style weavers and embroiderers
Department
African Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

Mbuun men wove and embroidered wrap skirts like this for women to wear on special occasions. Gently color-shifted patterns ( lubawa ) along the central panels were achieved by “floating” wefts (selectively covering over vertical, or warp, threads with horizontal, or weft, threads). In contrast, various black-brown embroidered diamonds cover the borders. These are called lobubasa, motifs also seen on cicatrices (ornamental scars) that once beautified women’s bodies. Short tufts running horizontally and vertically across the textile were created by inserting extra fibers, then cutting and fluffing them with a knife. These add texture and hide the seams between woven panels. The diamond motifs on this skirt have symbolic and cosmological links to lizards ( mbil ), an animal associated with matrilineal (female descent) clans.

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