● On view now — Gallery 59
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
In 19th-century hammams , or public baths, bath towels and kerchiefs were some of the most popular and intricately made items. Bath towels were only embroidered on the edges, leaving the middle section bare for drying the body. Women wrapped kerchiefs on their heads as they transitioned to the cold room afterward. In hammams, women were able to showcase items from their dowries, their skillful hand embroidery, and social status with decorative bath coats, clogs, towels, and wrappers. —Atlas Defne Erkan (Turkish), graduate student in art history, University of Edinburgh; School of the Art Institute of Chicago (BFA 2025)
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Anonymous — Towel or Napkin
Greece, Northern Sporades Islands, Lesbos, Mytilene — Towel
Greece or Turkey — Towel
Greece, Northern Sporades Islands, Lesbos, Mytilene — Scarf
Anonymous — Towel or Napkin
Anonymous — Towel or Napkin
Greece, Northern Sporades Islands, possibly Lesbos, Mytilene
Anonymous — Towel
Greece, Northern Sporades Islands, Lesbos, Mytilene — Towel
India — Fragment (From a Sari)
Greece, Dodecanese Islands, Patmos — Panels (For a Bed Curta
India — Shawl