Currently not on view
Currently not on view
The large trains embroidered on both sides of this sainchi phulkari have engines puffing thick black smoke and cars filled with passengers. The center square may be a train station or a board for playing chaupar (a popular Indian game), or perhaps both. Does the scene reflect the embroiderer’s everyday world or her dreams and imaginings? Trains, for example, were potent symbols of longing, whether for an absent husband, son, or daughter, or for a woman’s own desire for adventure.
Currently not on view
Title: | Sainchi Phulkari |
Date: | 20th century |
Artist: | Artist/maker unknown, Punjabi |
Medium: | Handspun cotton plain weave (khaddar) with silk, cotton, and wool embroidery in darning, pattern darning, buttonhole, herringbone, running, chain and Cretan stitches |
Dimensions: | 7 feet 5 1/2 inches × 48 1/2 inches (227.3 × 123.2 cm) |
Classification: | Textiles |
Credit Line: | The Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz Phulkari Collection |
Accession Number: | 2017-9-14 |
Geography: | Made in Punjab, eastern Punjab, India, Asia Possibly made in Bhatinda, Punjab, eastern Punjab, India, Asia |
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Currently not on view