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Textile in the Coastal Tiahuanaco style.
A.D. 800.
Alpaca, cotton, wool.
21" long.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York, United States.
Gardner's Art Through the Ages Seventh Edition.
Chapter Fourteen: The Native Arts of the Americas, Africa, and the South Pacific.
Figure 14-16.
Batik demonstrator Tri Asayani from Indonesia enjoys a visit to the TM's interactive Textile Learning Center. Photo by Ana Kiss.
Textiles in three colors (red, dark blue, white) woven by Paula del Cerro using Theo Moorman’s inlay technique to create geometric shapes with horizontal and vertical edges. The square napkins measure about sixteen inches on a side. The designs were generated with software written by Paul Hertz. Each of the designs represents a moment in a cyclic transform along a space-filling curve.
Photographed in natural light in my studio space "La Nave" in Spain.
The place where it all happens! In 2004 the former factoryhall was renovated to a textile lab. Students, artists and designers create new materials with a diversity of machines.
Textile printed through Spoonflower. Images are scans of visitor created tiles created at the de Young Museums during my residency there.
All of the buildings here have been moved from other places or specially built for the museum. Bocholt was once famous for its textile industry.
This textile shopkeeper decides to pose with a belly-dancer outfit for my camera *tries not to be too grossed out*.
African texture @ British Museum.
Inscription: "your problem is that you can't stop backbiting" - 2002
Fragment of ancient textile showing a serpent figure. Museum of Anthropology, Archaeology and History in Lima.