Musée du Quai Branly - Jacques-Chirac
37 Quai Jacques Chirac
75007 Paris
Golden Thread - The Art of Dressing from North Africa to the Far East
Until 6th July 2025
From the Maghreb to Japan, a fabulous journey through time and space, discovering the mysterious and fascinating origins of gold and its marriage with the textile arts.
The world's most precious and noble metal, an object of envy, a symbol of wealth and splendour, a sign of elegance and refinement... Discovered nearly 7,000 years ago, gold has never ceased to fascinate mankind. The ultimate material for all kinds of expertise, experimentation and tradition, it has been used since antiquity to make jewellery, ornaments and weapons. As early as the fifth millennium B.C., it was used to embellish the first luxury fabrics for men of power. Over the centuries that followed, skilled weavers and craftsmen Roman, Byzantine, Chinese, Persian and then Muslim used the most ingenious techniques to create veritable fabrics of art where silk or linen fibres were intertwined with gold threads and strips.
From the first ornaments sewn onto the garments of the deceased to the flamboyant dresses of contemporary Chinese artist Guo Pei that are found throughout the exhibition, from the gold-woven silks of the Indian and Indonesian worlds to the glittering kimonos of the Edo era, this exhibition reveals the age-old history of gold in the textile arts. In a dialogue combining scientific discoveries and artistic perspectives, it unveils the dazzling beauty, diversity, richness and the technical nature of the outfits of a vast region from the Maghreb to Japan, including the countries of the Middle East, India, and China.
Opening hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday: 10:30 am-07:00 pm, Thursday: 10:30 am-10:00 pm. Closed Mondays
Admission: €14
https://www.quaibranly.fr/en/exhibition ... fil-de-lor
The Art of Dressing from North Africa to the Far East - Paris - Until 6-7-2025
Post an announcement here if you know of an upcoming or current silver exhibit.
Return to “Museum Exhibitions - Silver - Temporary”
Jump to
- The Silver Marks Forum ~ Requirements & Tutorials
- ↳ Posting Requirements
- Announcements
- ↳ Website Updates & Announcements
- American Sterling & Coin Silver - (no silverplate, jewelry or watches)
- ↳ Sterling Manufacturers ~ American after-1860
- ↳ Coin Silversmiths ~ American pre-1860
- ↳ Arts & Crafts Smiths ~ American Handwrought after-1900
- ↳ American Sterling & Coin Silver - Single Image
- British Hallmarks - (no silverplate, jewelry or watches)
- ↳ London Hallmarks
- ↳ Birmingham Hallmarks
- ↳ Chester Hallmarks
- ↳ Exeter Hallmarks
- ↳ Newcastle Hallmarks
- ↳ Sheffield Hallmarks
- ↳ York Hallmarks
- ↳ Scottish Hallmarks
- ↳ Irish Hallmarks
- ↳ Provincial & Colonial Marks
- ↳ Grimwade's Biographies ~ Updates
- ↳ London Lost Registers & Unrecorded Marks
- ↳ British Hallmarks - Single Image
- European Silver - (no silverplate, jewelry or watches)
- ↳ Dutch Silver
- ↳ French Silver
- ↳ German Silver
- ↳ Russian Silver
- ↳ Scandinavian Silver
- ↳ Other Countries
- ↳ German, French, Dutch, Russian, Scandinavian or Other - Single Image
- Silverplated Ware
- ↳ Silverplate Trademarks - Worldwide
- ↳ Silver Plate Trademarks - Single Image
- Silver Jewelry & Watches
- ↳ American Jewelry
- ↳ European Jewelry
- ↳ Other Jewelry
- ↳ Silver Jewelry - Single Image
- Silver of the Americas
- ↳ Mexican Silversmiths
- ↳ Central & South America
- ↳ Native American Silver
- ↳ Silver of the Americas - Single Image
- Asian & Middle Eastern Silver
- ↳ Middle East
- ↳ Far East
- ↳ Asia & Middle East - Single Image
- Gold Marks
- ↳ Gold Marks - Worldwide
- ↳ Gold - Single Image
- Miscellaneous Silver Subjects
- ↳ General Questions
- ↳ Contributors' Notes
- ↳ Ephemera
- ↳ Silver Care / Techniques
- ↳ Mystery Objects
- ↳ Flatware Pattern Identification
- ↳ Family Crests
- ↳ Museum Exhibitions - Silver - Temporary
- ↳ Museum Exhibitions - Silver - Permanent