Skip to main content
Collections Menu
SAM'S collection
Photo: Beth Mann
Kesa
Photo: Beth Mann

Kesa

Date18th-19th century
Label TextOriginating in South Asia, kesa, known as kasaya in Sanskrit, were initially made of tattered cloth fragments to replicate the simple patched garment of the historical Buddha. In ancient times, wandering ascetics picked up dirtied scraps of cloth from the ground, washed them and stitched them into rectangular-shaped garments. The finished cloak, traditionally made of forty-eight small pieces, was said to symbolize a mandala, a visual representation of the whole universe made of innumerable discrete parts. An extravagant kesa like this copper-orange example was likely donated to a temple by a wealthy devotee hoping to accrue merit.
Object number34.161
Photo CreditPhoto: Beth Mann
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Luminous: The Art of Asia, October 13, 2011 - January 8, 2012
Credit LineEugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Dimensions40 3/4 in. (103.5 cm) L.: 73 in
MediumSilk cloth and gilded paper
Kesa
Japanese
1596-1614
Object number: 34.127
Noh robe
Japanese
late 17th-early 18th century
Object number: 95.138
Photo: Paul Macapia
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 2001.422
Kesa
Japanese
1704
Object number: 34.122
Photo: Beth Mann
Japanese
ca. 1688-1703
Object number: 34.123
Kesa
Japanese
ca. 1684
Object number: 34.124
Photo: Paul Macapia
Japanese
1661 - 72
Object number: 34.125
Kesa
Japanese
1615
Object number: 34.126
Kesa
Japanese
1751
Object number: 34.128
Kesa
Japanese
1804
Object number: 34.130
Photo: Beth Mann
Japanese
1780
Object number: 34.132
Kesa
Japanese
1744
Object number: 34.133