AESTHETIC OF TEXTILE TRADITIONS

Course Code:

Π1 5080

Semester:

5th Semester

Course Hours:

2

ECTS:

2


The Scope of the Course:
The course covers the study of historical textiles, by focusing on the textile traditions of Greece. The study of textiles holds important position in the fields of pre-modern and modern material culture, as it can shed light on the social symbolisms that dress, ceremonial and domestic drapery conveyed. It offers a window to the cultural, social and economic trends of the context in which textiles were produced and consumed.

Course Theory
The theory of the course covers the following:
The basic methodology for the identification and study of different traditions of textiles and their decoration. At the same time, the course will also cover the aspects of trade, aesthetic and social symbolism in relation to the textile traditions of Greece, and with particular emphasis on the periods from which more material remnants survive (that is from the Late Middle Ages and on).
1. The interdisciplinary study of textiles
2. Ancient Greek textiles
3. Coptic textiles
4. Early Christian and Middle Byzantine weaving
5. Late Byzantine textile culture
6. Weaving workshops of Ottoman Constantinople and Bursa
7. Post-Byzantine ecclesiastical embroidery
8. Imported textiles from Europe and Asia in Ottoman Greece
9. The weaving industry of Chios
10. Printed textiles in Greece
11. Greek folk dress
12. Museum trip
13. Revision

Course objectives:
The course’s objectives are to provide to the students the methodology for the study of the aesthetic and decoration of historical textiles, as well as to expose them to the major textile traditions of Greece from antiquity until the modern times.

EXPECTED LEARNING OUTCOMES
The students after successful completion of the module will be able to:
The students after successful completion of the module will be able:
1. To study historical textiles (archaeological, ethnic, and modern) with an interdisciplinary methodology
2. To understand the analysis of textile objects through the provided foundations. Different aspects of production, use, and aesthetic.
3. to poss the necessary analytical tools for the identification and study of textiles, as well as their contextualization.

STUDENT ASSESSMENT
Language of evaluation is Greek
Students’ evaluation (100%): Essay writing (individually) on a selected subject from the beginning of the semester

Guidelines are given at the first lecture of the course and posted on e-class

SUGGESTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Cybulska, M. 2015, Understanding Textiles – from Artist to Spectator, Fibres& Textiles in Eastern Europe, 23(3), 133-140. https://journals.indexcopernicus.com/search/article?articleId=58710
2. Ebert, C.E., Harlow, M. E., Anderson Strand, E. and Birgitta L. (eds). 2018. Traditional Textile Craft – an Intangible Cultural Heritage? The SAXO Institute, Denmark, 2nd edition, https://www.traditionaltextilecraft.dk/e-publication
3. Emery, I. 1994. The primary Structure of Fabrics: An Illustrated Classification. Thames and Hudson.
4. Ingold, T.2010 “The Textility of Making”, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 34(1), 2010, p. 91-102. https://doi.org/10.1093/cje/bep042
5. Jacoby, J. 2004. “Silk Economics and Cross-Cultural Artistic Interaction: Byzantium, the Muslim World, and the Christian West”, in Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 58, 2004, p. 197-240.
6. James C. Y. Watt, Anne E. Wardwell (ed.), 1997. When Silk was Gold: Central Asian and Chinese Textiles, exh. cat. (Cleveland, Cleveland Museum of Art; New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1997-1998), New York, 1997.
7. Mola, L. 2000. The Silk Industry of Renaissance Venice, Baltimore/London, 2000.
8. Riello, G. and Parthasarathi, P. 2011. The Spinning World: A Global History of Cotton Textiles, 1200-1850. OUP/Pasold Research Fund.
9. Schulz V.-S. 2016 , “Crossroads of Cloth: Textile Arts and Aesthetics in and beyond the Medieval Islamic World”, Perspective, 1 , 93-108.
10. Thomas, T.K. 2012, “Ornaments of Excellence from the Miserable Gains of Commerce: Luxury Art and Byzantine Culture”, in Byzantium and Islam: Age of Transition 7th-9th Century, Helen C. Evans, Brandie Ratcliff (ed.), exh. cat. (New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2012), New York/New Haven/London, 2012, p. 124-135.
11. Weiner, A.B. and Schneider, J. (eds.) 1989. Cloth and Human Experience. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.
12. Vryzidis, N. “An Early Modern Syncretism: Greek Orthodox Ecclesiastical Dress in the Ottoman Empire”, Βυζαντινά37 (2019-20) [2021], 239-70.
13. Οικονομίδης Ν. και Χατζηγεωργίου Ρ. 2008. Η Ελληνική Ενδυμασία: το ιστορικό οδοιπορικό της και ο κοινωνικός της ρόλος, Δωδώνη.
14. Παπαντωνίου Ι. 2000. Η ελληνική Ενδυμασία , Εμπορική Τράπεζα της Ελλάδος.
15. Περιβολιώτου Μ.Α. 2004. Η Τέχνη του Υφάσματος Ι. Εκδόσεις Ίων. Αθήνα
16. Περιβολιώτου Μ.Α. 2004. Η Τέχνη του Υφάσματος ΙΙ: Υφαντική Διαπλεκτική, Μπατίκ. Εκδόσεις Ίων. Αθήνα.
17. Τζαχίλη Ί. 1997. Υφαντική Και Υφάντρες Στο Προϊστορικό Αιγαίο 2000 – 1000 π. Χ. Πανεπιστημιακές Εκδόσεις Κρήτης.