This striking hand-painted artwork is an original textile design from Japan, dating to the Mid-Showa period (1945–1965). Originating from a professional studio in Kyoto's renowned Nishijin district, this piece was rendered on thick paper to serve as a high-fidelity blueprint for a woven obi. Measuring 12 inches by 25 inches (30 cm x 64 cm), the artwork remains in very good condition and demonstrates the bold, angular geometric compositions that gained popularity in mid-century Japanese textile arts.
The composition features a series of sharp, overlapping triangular and trapezoidal panels that create a dynamic mosaic effect against a textured mint-grey ground. Within these panels, the artist has placed intricate, jewel-toned floral medallions in shades of orange, yellow, blue, and green, set against a rich plum-colored field. These medallions are interspersed with delicate white-on-grey diamond lattices, providing a sophisticated contrast between dense ornamentation and clean geometric lines. The arrangement of the panels suggests the folded layers of a kimono or the precise overlapping of a formal obi wrap, integrating the garment's final form into the design itself.