Rozome Masters Auction Now Open!
Here's How You Can Bid
Simply go to our catalog, browse the artwork and select your favorites. Check the latest price and click on the title to view details about the work and bid. Bidding increments are $25. You will be asked to enter credit card data, (Visa and MasterCard only please) then place your bid.To keep track of the item's price simply click "add watch" and we will let you know as the bid price changes.
The Rozome Masters Auction is now open for bidding. Please review our catalog for 17 fine shikishi works of art.
Picture: Detail of "Transformation Over Time" by Midori Abe. 70" X 70"
For more than 2500 years, artists throughout the world have used wax and dye to create patterns and images on fabric - a technique known universally as batik. Now, we welcome the World Batik Conference Boston 2005, the first convention in the United States to focus on batik in its totality. Its scope ranges from the anonymous Tulis batik workers of Indonesia, the innovators of Adire batik in Africa, and the Rozome masters in Asia, to the multiple enthusiasts in Europe and North America. The three-day conference, workshops, and accompanying exhibitions have attracted the interest of artists, scholars, and educators from six continents. It will focus on the development of batik around the world, the international significance of this art form and its global popularity, innovations, education, cultural diversity, technical training, and networking.
The World Batik Conference Organizing Committee joins with our host, Massachusetts College of Art, to invite you to Boston for this milestone event. Surface designers, educators, collectors, designers, multi-media artists, and quilters will all find this event a valuable and stimulating opportunity.
Donated by
Shoukoh KobayashiDonated by
Katsuji YamadeDonated by
Keijin IhayaDonated by
Yuki KatoJapanese Rozome Masters Exhibition
The Japanese Rozome Masters Exhibition will be on display in the Stephen D. Paine Gallery, at Massachusetts College of Art, June 10 - September 21, 2005 and continue at The Textile Museum, Washington DC. October 14 - February 12, 2005. Most of the artists work large, sometimes on 6' - 10' folding screens, opened and wall mounted; work created to the demands of the large museum spaces of Japan. Some are also well known for their superb kimonos.






