Imperial Nobleman’s Semi-Formal Court Robe

Unknown Chinese, Chinese

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1919

Purple silk, gold and silver metallic thread

Overall: 54 3/4 × 87 1/8 in. (139.1 × 221.3 cm)

Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: Gift of Patricia Lerner, in memory of her father, Edgar Spring Winters, Class of 1916

175.17.25597

Geography

Place Made: China, East Asia, Asia

Period

20th century

Object Name

Clothing: Outerwear

Research Area

Asia

On view

Label

This robe is considered a modern reproduction of the traditional jifu 吉服, which translates to “festive dress.” Historically, this type of robe was worn during special events such as festivals or banquets. Alongside auspicious motifs like the clouds, mythical flowers, and longevity characters embroidered all over this robe, the foregrounded dragon symbolizes the high social status of the wearer. Only the emperor, empress, or empress dowager could wear yellow robes adorned with nine five-clawed dragons. This regulation remained in place until the late 1800s, when it was discarded amidst China’s ongoing political turmoil.

From the 2024 exhibition Attitude of Coexistence: Non-Humans in East Asian Art, curated by Haely Chang, Jane and Raphael Bernstein Associate Curator of East Asian Art

Course History

ANTH 57, Origins of Inequality, Alan Covey, Winter 2013

Exhibition History

Attitude of Coexistence: Non-humans in East Asian Art, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, November 16, 2024-March 1, 2025.

Objects and Power: Manifestations of Inequality, a student curated exhibition, Professor Alan Covey, ANTH 57, Winter 2013, Harrington Gallery Teaching Exhibition, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, April 10-August 25, 2013.

Provenance

Collected by Edgar Spring Winters [1890-1969], ca. 1916-1919; given to his daughter, Patricia Lerner, Williamsville, New York; given to present collection, 1975.

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