This monumental Miao textile originates from the Guizhou province of China and dates to the second half of the 20th century (1950–2000). Measuring 42 inches by 60 inches (107 cm x 152 cm), this substantial piece is in excellent condition. It is a masterful assembly of twenty-four individual cotton appliqué panels meticulously stitched together and enclosed within a wide, protective frame of indigo-black cotton.
The quilt features a complex grid-based composition centered around a large four-panel focal point. This central area depicts stylized mythical creatures and zoomorphic forms, including birds and four-legged beasts rendered in a muted palette of ochre, slate blue, and charcoal. Surrounding this core is a rhythmic repeating pattern of smaller squares. Each border panel contains a stylized floral or solar medallion framed by four avian figures (likely "Mother Butterflies" or ancestral birds) in flight. The use of negative space and the high-contrast cream background allows the bold, graphic shapes to dominate the visual field, a technique often used by the Miao to record communal legends and historical migrations in a "wordless" format.