first quarter of the 18th century
India
Object qualities
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Objecttextile (towels, carpets, etc.): Palampore
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Type of arts & crafts
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MediumCotton (painted resist and mordant, dyed)
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SizeWarp 44 9/16 in. (113.2 cm); weft 72 in. (182.9 cm)
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Geography details
India -
Country today
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Datefirst quarter of the 18th century
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CultureIndia (Coromandel Coast), for the Sri Lankan market
Source of information
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Type of sourceDatabase “Metropolitan Museum of Art”
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Fund that the source refers toMetropolitan Museum of Art
Description
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Palampores were a regular feature of the eighteenth-century chintz trade to Europe, where they were prized as wall hangings and bed and table coverings. They typically show a central flower-and-fruit-bearing serpentine tree emerging from a hillock with stylized peaks or rocks. In addition to those produced for the Dutch and English markets, a class of smaller palampores was made expressly for the intra-Asian trade. This robustly painted version was originally sourced to Sri Lanka, likely made for the European communities in Batavia and Colombo or for families of mixed European and Asian descent wishing to emulate Western taste.
cat. no. 37
Reconstructions of this ornament