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Schuster assembled his collection with a wide variety of household items, clothes and specimens during four long journeys to the western and southwestern regions and some areas in central and south China between 1932 and 1938. Schuster believed that the various symbols appearing on what seemed to be the simplest cross stitch could indeed bring us back to traditional Chinese culture. Therefore, he amassed a wide range of designs with different symbolic meanings. Because of this extraordinary level of documentation, the collection has unusual potential for the study of traditional Chinese textile decoration techniques and symbolism. In 1960, due to the warm friendship between Schuster and The Field Museum Curator of Asian Ethnology, Kenneth Starr, Schuster eventually decided to sell most of his Chinese folk embroidery collection to The Field Museum, which included 1000 objects and several hundred specimens. He also gave the museum his extensive files of notes and photographs, including his dissertation. |
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