Title:
Senninbari (Thousand Stitches)
Creator/Contributor:
Sugimoto, Henry
Date:
ca. 1942
Identifier:
92.97.140
Format:
painting
oil on canvas
New York, N.Y.
Inscription:
Signed in medium, bottom left corner: H. Sugimoto. Written on back: "Thousand Stitches" / by Henry Sugimoto ; Upper right
(In Japanese): Senninbari / 1982 / HS, NY
Description:
Stretched and framed. Image of a ghostly outline of Nisei soldier standing in salute as he looks down at a woman holding up
a senninbari with a thousand stitches (scarf of remembrance). She in maroon top and black skirt stands in front of a barbed
wire fence with sign, "Block 2," in the foreground. The white scarf has a tiger's face and Japanese characters among the stiches.
A rattlesnake is coiled on the other side of the fence, lower left. Dirt and dry grasses extend past the watch tower with
soldier to the green trees in the background. A grey object lies in the grass next to the tower. Above trees, white crosses
with one American flag appear on a field of blue at center, with red gold sky to either side. (Very similar to the painting
entitled "In Camp Jerome", also by Sugimoto 92.97.9.)
Historical Note:
In the years following World War II, Sugimoto revisited the subjects he had depicted during his years in the concentration
camps. Often starting from compositions he created during the war, he translated many works onto larger canvases and inserted
new details. Issei mothers prepared their sons for war by creating a senninbari, a protective talisman made of cloth. An
image is sewn onto the fabric with a thousand stiches done by many women throughout the camp. Sugimoto's sympathy for both
Nisei soldiers and their Issei parents is evident in this work.
Subject:
442nd Regimental Combat Team
Concentration camps
Japanese Americans
Soldiers
Mothers
Sons
Crosses
Death
Duty
Senninbari
Watchtowers
Rattlesnakes
Ghosts