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Reiko Sudo, Nuno Corporation, and others

Mercury

1996

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Mercury

1996

Physical Qualities Silk, aluminum foil, acrylic resin, 84 x 42-1/2 in. Hemmed at both ends--finished length is 80"
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 2002.51
In 1990, Reiko Sudo employed “spatter-plating” technology developed by the automotive industry to make a series of revolutionary sheer, metal-coated, polyester fabrics. Later, she returned to a more traditional method to produce Mercury. Gold and silver foils by themselves are not particularly innovative, as they were used on Japanese kimono silks; but in Mercury, NUNO’s mixture of modern and traditional materials filtered through a contemporary aesthetic creates its own alchemy. Aluminum foil applied in irregular dots to two layers of silk organdy (one white, one blue) with the addition of acrylic resin gives a somewhat bolder répoussé effect resembling drops of spilled liquid metal.
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

Engineer

Keiji Otani

2000–2000

Meet Keiji Otani

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