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Kazuhiro Ueno and Nuno Corporation

Tape Twist

2002

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Tape Twist

2002

Physical Qualities Polyester, nylon, Base: 148 x 55 1/2 in. (375.9 x 141 cm.) Panel was hemmed to create pocket for display rod and finished length is 146"
Credit Line The Jane and Worth B. Daniels, Jr. Fund
Object Number 2007.162
(Label for "NUNO: Japanese Tradition/Innovation in Cloth," Baltimore Museum of Art, Berman Textile Gallery, March 28 - October 7, 2007 TAPE TWIST Japanese, Tokyo Manufacturer: Nuno Corporation (Japanese, 1984 - present) Designer: Reiko Sudo (Japanese, born 1953) Polyester, nylon 2002 The Baltimore Museum of Art: Jane and Worth B. Daniels, Jr. Fund of the Baltimore Community Foundation BMA R. 16331.1 Tape Twist is one of a series of NUNO fabrics all created using a similar method: by attaching a narrow tape of nylon, polyester, or cotton to a ground of polyester organdy, net, vinylon, or solid cotton. In the fabric for which the series was named, Shutters, the base of vinylon is washed away with water, leaving only the web-like structure formed by the nylon tape. This is the same technique traditionally employed to create "chemical lace"--fabrics that appear to be lace, but are actually the result of designs embroidered on a base fabric that is then removed in a caustic solution. In, Tape Twist, the sheer polyester organdy base remains intact beneath the applied nylon tape, producing a textile with a strong graphic identity and the illusion of an open latticework.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by purchase, 2007; from the factory via Material Things, La Jolla,
California
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).

Designer

Kazuhiro Ueno

2000–2000

Japanese
Meet Kazuhiro Ueno

Manufacturer

Nuno Corporation

1983–2000

Tokyo, 1984-present
Meet Nuno Corporation

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