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Image Not Available for Cloth
Cloth
Image Not Available for Cloth

Cloth

Date20th century
Maker Ewe
Label TextEwe weavers use the same loom as their famous neighbors, the Asante. Strips, usually around four inches in width, are created precisely to be sewn into the completed cloth. As compositions, the cloths have a vivid vocabulary of accents. High contrast colors are used to set up staggered pulses of pattern that has been called "offbeat phrasing." Unlike the Asante, the Ewe never united into a confederacy or kingdom, so their weavers offer cloths for a diverse client base that requires less stratification and more imagination. As a result, Ewe cloth is marked by new designs with many recognizable motifs, in fresh color schemes.
Object number2005.97
Credit LineGift of Simon Ottenberg, in honor of the 75th Anniversary of the Seattle Art Museum
Dimensions124 x 75 1/2 in. (315 x 191.8 cm)
MediumCotton
Photo: Paul Macapia
Ghanaian
Object number: 81.17.466
Cloth
Ghanaian
20th century
Object number: 81.17.321
Cloth
Ghanaian
20th century
Object number: 81.17.438
Cloth
Ghanaian
20th century
Object number: 81.17.460
Cloth
Ghanaian
20th century
Object number: 81.17.462
Cloth
Ghanaian
Object number: 81.17.667
Photo: Paul Macapia
Ghanaian
20th century
Object number: 81.17.433
Kente Cloth
Ghanaian
Object number: 81.17.456
Cloth
Ghanaian
Object number: 81.17.467