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Reiko Sudo and Nuno Corporation

Copper Cloth

1992

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Copper Cloth

1992

Physical Qualities Copper wire (84%), Promix (regenerated milk casein powder and acrylonitrile) (16%), 147-1/4 x 46-1/4 in. Hem was created as casing for accommodating a rod for display. Finished length is 144 1/2 inches.
Credit Line Purchased in Memory of Dena S. Katzenberg, Consultant Curator of Textiles, 1969-2000, with funds contributed by her Family and Friends
Object Number 2002.53
Copper Cloth owes its luscious pink sheen to its wefts of thin copper wire, the same kind of wire used in telephone cables. The wires have been treated with polyurethane by the manufacturer to prevent corrosion and brittleness, but this coating has the added benefit of making the wire easier to loom without dulling its sheen. The copper wefts glimmer through the warps of “promix,” a synthetic created from regenerated milk casein powder and the petro-chemical acrylonitrile.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by purchase, 2002; textile was purchased directly from manufacturer
Anita Jones, NUNO: Japanese Tradition/Innovation in Cloth, The Baltimore Museum of Art, Jean and Allan Berman Textile Gallery, March 28 - October 14, 2007 (extended from October 7th), brochure, no catalog.

Inscribed: None.

Designer

Reiko Sudo

1952–2000

Japanese, born 1953
Meet Reiko Sudo

Manufacturer

Nuno Corporation

1983–2000

Tokyo, 1984-present
Meet Nuno Corporation

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