
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Outer Noh robe of grape vines with autumn grasses
Japan
- Date
- early 19th century
- Medium
- Silk brocade
- Department
- Asian Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
Richly brocaded garments known as karaori , literally Chinese weaving, are reserved for women's roles in Japanese Nō dramas. Although they resemble embroidery, they are actually woven by a difficult technique of floating weft threads of glossed silk to form a dense, colorful pattern against a solid ground. In this case, grape vines and autumn grasses intertwine with a bamboo lattice pattern. The difficult and time-consuming nature of karaori weaving made these garments the rarest and most expensive of all. Asia
The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.

Noh Robe (Karaori)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Noh costume (nuihaku) with autumn flowers
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Noh Robe (Karaori)
Cleveland Museum of Art
Karaori (Noh Costume)
Art Institute of Chicago

Noh Robe (Karaori)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Noh Robe (Karaori)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Noh costume (nuihaku) with floral motifs
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Noh Robe (Karaori)
Cleveland Museum of Art
Karaori (Nô Costume)
Art Institute of Chicago
Atsuita Karaori (Noh Costume)
Art Institute of Chicago

Noh costume with geometric pattern for the role of Okina
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Atsuita karaori (Noh Costume)
Art Institute of Chicago