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Brocade Asian Art and Furniture

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Material: Brocade
Moroccan Moorish Caftan Maxi Dress Brocade Aquamarine Blue and Silver Size M L
Located in North Hollywood, CA
Elegant vintage Moroccan Moorish caftan. brocade metallic aquamarine blue embroidered with silver threads. Maxi dress gown circa 1970s. This vintage Moo...
Category

Mid-20th Century Moroccan Bohemian Brocade Asian Art and Furniture

Materials

Brocade

Japanese Six Panel Screen: Rocks and Waves in a Coastal Landscape
Located in Hudson, NY
Rocks and waves in a coastal landscape. Taisho (1912-1926) period painting. Mineral pigments on silk. Artist’s signature and seal reads: Tomokazu. Six panels measure 67 1/2 inches h...
Category

20th Century Japanese Brocade Asian Art and Furniture

Materials

Brocade, Silk

Japanese Two Panel Screen: Dancing Zodiac Animals at New Years Festival
Located in Hudson, NY
Animals of the Japanese zodiac dancing in colorful costumes celebrating the New Year.
Category

Early 19th Century Japanese Antique Brocade Asian Art and Furniture

Materials

Silk, Paper, Brocade

Japanese Two Panel Screen, Sun and Cresting Waves Through Maple
Located in Hudson, NY
Maple, sun and waves in mineral pigments on gold leaf.
Category

1950s Japanese Vintage Brocade Asian Art and Furniture

Materials

Gold Leaf

Japanese Contemporary Purple Black Silk Brocade Oshie Decorative Art
Located in Takarazuka, JP
Extraordinary contemporary Japanese traditional extremely detailed handcrafted decorative art form using high quality silk and brocade fabrics, known as oshie (literally, “pressed pi...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Japanese Meiji Brocade Asian Art and Furniture

Materials

Brocade, Silk

Japanese Contemporary silk brocade Traditional Oshie Handcrafted Decorative Art
Located in Takarazuka, JP
Extraordinary hand crafted Japanese contemporary traditional oshie decorative art piece with a stunning three-dimensional effect. This is a traditional Japanese handcrafted wall decorative art form using high quality silk and brocade fabrics, known as oshie (literally, “pressed pictures”) that goes back to the Edo period (1603-1868). It is said this art form was born of the reluctance of ladies of the court to discard the magnificent silk kimonos and brocaded obi they had donned for a lifetime. The solution was to recycle these opulent fabrics into stunning works of art. Oshie resembles a carefully crafted very intricate jigsaw puzzle comprising numerous intricate pieces of kimono fabric padded with slightly differing thicknesses of cotton and painstakingly glued and ironed individually. All those tiny pieces are then glued one by one on a custom-made board making sure each piece lands on the exact right place making sure that the right pieces overlap the lower pieces to create an undulating three-dimesional picture. Highly detailed oshie pieces contain hundreds of small pieces that are expertly aligned to recreate even the minutest details of the the painting In the final process. Facial features are painted in miniature-like exactitude. The end product is an awe-inspiring piece with a surprising three-dimensional effect. This magnificent piece depicts a fascinating scene of a lady of privilege wearing an exquisitely brocaded headdress and overcoat to protect herself from the cold. Each dainty step she takes exposes the folds of her multi-layered kimono in a scene reminiscent of the ladies of the ancient imperial court of Japan. The creator of this signed piece has prided herself in using exquisite antique and vintage kimono and obi...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Japanese Meiji Brocade Asian Art and Furniture

Materials

Brocade, Silk

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