Textile thumbnail 1
Textile thumbnail 2
Not currently on display at the V&A

Textile

ca.1880 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This piece is one of a group of six similar pieces which may have been samples made for the export trade. The gold embroidery (zardozi) used metal thread and pieces of the iridescent wing-cases (elytra) of the beetle Sternocera aequisignata (family Buprestidae, Jewel Beetles). Many of these beetle wing cases were collected in Burma (Myanmar) and sold on through Kolkata (Calcutta). Valued for their hardness and permanence of colour, their reflective qualities were sometimes thought to ward off evil spirits. Beetle wings were used by both indigenous groups such as the Naga of N.E. India and in sumptuous Mughal court dress. Beetle wing embroidery became fashionable in Europe in the 19th century. It was usually done in India, but sometimes in Europe, using imported cut and pierced sections of beetle wing.


Object details

Category
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 6 parts.

  • Textile
  • Textile
  • Textile
  • Textile
  • Textile
  • Textile
Materials and techniques
Embroidery with gold thread and pieces of beetle-wing on net.
Brief description
Embroidered muslin, Madras (Chennai), ca. 1880.
Physical description
Sections of black muslin net embroidered with gold thread and pieces of beetle-wing.
Dimensions
  • Is.1917 1883 length: 117cm
  • Is.1917 1883 width: 48cm
Object history
This was one part of a 'dress' bought by Caspar Purdon Clarke for £5 in India in 1882. It was part of a consignment of thirty seven cases and packages shipped from Bombay by Messrs Henry King & Co. on the SS 'Darlington' in June 1882, and would probably have been sent by railway from Madras.
Subjects depicted
Summary
This piece is one of a group of six similar pieces which may have been samples made for the export trade. The gold embroidery (zardozi) used metal thread and pieces of the iridescent wing-cases (elytra) of the beetle Sternocera aequisignata (family Buprestidae, Jewel Beetles). Many of these beetle wing cases were collected in Burma (Myanmar) and sold on through Kolkata (Calcutta). Valued for their hardness and permanence of colour, their reflective qualities were sometimes thought to ward off evil spirits. Beetle wings were used by both indigenous groups such as the Naga of N.E. India and in sumptuous Mughal court dress. Beetle wing embroidery became fashionable in Europe in the 19th century. It was usually done in India, but sometimes in Europe, using imported cut and pierced sections of beetle wing.
Collection
Accession number
IS.1917 to E-1883

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Record createdAugust 1, 2008
Record URL
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