Traditional
textiles play a major role in creating an identity. A piece of fabric can
communicate a lot about the culture, history, geography, occupation and
character of the person wearing it as well as the place from which it has
originated. In today’s class, we learnt the process of how to read cloth by
answering the 4W’s and H.
We were
divided into groups and given a traditional fabric from Africa. The only information
we were provided with was which part of Africa the textile originated from. The
rest was up to us to figure out. This was interesting as it really enabled us
to study the fabric’s qualities such as the patterns painted on it, the
material used, the techniques, dyes, ornamentation etc.
From
reading Yuko Tanaka’s comparative
study of textile production and trading (16th century to the end of
the 19th century), I can see how textiles has played such a vital role among
Asian and European countries. Apart from being an important commodity for trade
and cultural exchange, it also communicates the everyday life values from
different historical eras.
Each country has
their own traditional textiles, motifs, patterns, methods etc. However the
article spoke of how the blending and trading of ideas and the combination of
conventional and non-conventional aspects led to the diverse variety of
textiles present today. For instance, although Chinese and Indian textiles were
different from one another, the Japanese was almost like a merger of the two,
taking inspiration from not only them but other south East Asian countries as
well. The ‘Suji’ or simple striped pattern that later developed into an array
of stripes in various colours called ‘Shima’ was one of Japan’s oldest and
famous motif (post Edo period). The Shima pattern is another example of how
much a textile can communicate about a person. Similar to the African mud cloth,
the Shima stripes reveal age, gender, class of the person, attractiveness,
personality type, economic status and elegance.
The whole concept of
being able to read cloth like it’s a book without pages and finding reams about
an individual just by looking at their attire intrigues me and has opened my
eyes to the deeper and more meaningful qualities that textiles has to offer.
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