The Dragon Cap , 2010s
Clothing Accessory

This black baseball cap with dragon motifs belongs to Tiffany Le, a Montreal-based artist and first-generation Chinese Canadian who immigrated to Canada at five. It features two dragons on each side of the cap, surrounding a central character that reads “dragon” in Chinese. The cap shows that twenty-first-century Chinese Canada women’s fashion can offer critiques of Western fashion appropriating Chinese culture. Incorporating Chinese motifs into mass-produced clothes and accessories also calls attention to issues such as the use of labour, consumerism and representation. Compared to the earlier generations, millennial Chinese Canadian women rarely wear traditional Chinese clothes. Their adoption of “world fashion” that combines Western and Chinese design elements do not emphasize their ethnic differences. Instead, it creates more ambiguity and space for interpretation, showing that these women are open to cross-cultural communication and exchange.

Exhibited by:

Violet Wolfe

Other works by Unknown

Back of Wordsworth Cottage at Grasmere 16 Aug 1850
Wordsworth Grasmere
St. Mary, north aisle, east window, 3rd light, upper panel: Saint Agnes , 15th century
Baleigh Drummond
Dove Cottage , Date unknown
Wordsworth Grasmere
Breviary , 1500
Baleigh Drummond
Book of Hours , 15 Century
Baleigh Drummond

More from Violet Wolfe

Contemporary Cheongsam II , 2010s
Dress
Violet Wolfe
Contemporary Cheongsam I , 2010s
Dress
Violet Wolfe
Portrait of Tiffany Le , 2010s
Photograph
Violet Wolfe
Wall text gallery 4
Violet Wolfe
Gallery three wall text
Violet Wolfe