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Correction - Opening Saturday: The Cloth that Changed the World

September 10, 2020
CORRECTION: A previous version of this e-newsletter misspelled the title of the exhibition. It has now been corrected.
OPENS SATURDAY
The Cloth that Changed the World: India's Painted and Printed Cottons
Opens Saturday, September 12
Included with Museum admission
Made with novel cotton, vivid colours and exuberant design, the painted and printed cottons of India changed human history; they revolutionized art, fashion and science wherever they went around the globe. Featuring pieces from the Museum’s world-renowned collection, this ROM-original exhibition explores how over thousands of years India’s artisans have created, perfected and innovated these printed and painted multicoloured cotton fabrics to fashion the body, honour divinities, and beautify palaces and homes.

Discover how through trade-routes, encounters, and exchange, these cloths connected cultures, inspired imitation and, quite literally, changed the world. 
ENHANCE YOUR EXPERIENCE
Exhibition Highlight Map
Delve deeper into the ROM-original exhibition The Cloth that Changed the World: India's Painted and Printed Cottons with this free descriptive audio tour.
Ask ROM Anything
Thursday, September 10; 10:00 am - 5:00 pm
Tune in to Instagram Live where Dr. Sarah Fee, lead Curator of The Cloth that Changed the World, will be taking your questions on this highly anticipated ROM-original exhibition.
LOOK BACK
Origins of Chintz, The Exhibit: A Look Back to 1970
This week, the ROM will once again share with the world its renowned collection of Indian chintz in a new exhibition. Look back at the ROM’s landmark exhibition The Origins of Chintz, which opened 50 years ago in April 1970. Occupying the whole of the central ground gallery, known today as Samuel Hall Currelly Gallery, the exhibition displayed nearly 100 towering examples of Indian ‘chintz’.  
All images courtesy of ROM unless otherwise noted. Woman’s jacket. Made in coastal southeast India for the Dutch market; used in Hindeloopen, Friesland. Mordant-dyed and resist-dyed cotton, 18th century, 57.8 cm.

For media inquiries, please contact media@rom.on.ca

The ROM is an agency of the Government of Ontario. 

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