Antique
Tapestry
Tapestry
Tapestry was used as a wall covering and, unlike
needlework, was woven on a loom. Also, it was made
in much larger sizes than would normally be worked
in hand-stitched embroidery; panels of tapestry ten
or twelve feet in height and twenty feet long are
not uncommon. Wool was the material employed principally,
but for special purposes silk was used. Gold and
silver threads appear in many of the finest examples.
Brussels was the principal centre of tapestry-weaving
from about the year 1500, and the enormous output
over the years varied greatly in quality. Subjects
included Roman and Biblical history, mythology, and
peasant scenes after Teniers. Seventeenth-and eighteenth-century
examples are often marred by the fact that time has
faded their red dyes to a murky brown. Many Brussels
tapestries bear a mark: a shield with a capital b
at either side, and individual weavers sometimes
added their names or initials. In France there were
two important factories: Beauvais and Gobelins, both
founded in the second half of the seventeenth century.
The former was a private concern with State support,
the latter was a Royal factory and not until late
in the eighteenth century could any of its productions
be purchased. Both did work of high quality, Beauvais
being especially famous for a series of panels based
on the Fables of La Fontaine, and for many sets of
chair and settee covers. The latter were made also
at Gobelins, where in about 1775 they made some noteworthy
sets of matching wall hangings and furniture covers.
A superb example of this decorative harmony, in a
room designed by Robert Adam, remains at Osterley
Park, near London, and a suite of furniture (parted
from its wall-hangings but still with its Gobelins
covers) made for Moor Park in Hertfordshire, is now
in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. A few more of
these rich ensembles are still intact, but a set
of tapestries made for a salon at Croome Park in
Warwickshire was sold some years ago for the sum
of £50,000, and is now
in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
At Aubusson, also in France, tapestry panels, chair
covers and also tapestry carpets were made. Much
of the output dates from the nineteenth century,
although it is similar in pattern to work of an earlier
period.
Tapestry was woven in Antwerp by Michael and Philip
Wauters, who specialized in supplying foreign markets.
Many of the panels made popular by other factories
were copied with success, and these Flemish tapestries
are confused frequently with the English productions
they imitate.
It can be assumed that tapestry was woven in England
from an early date; a Royal decree of 1364 refers
to the corporation of Tapissers, but nothing of their
work has been identified. The earliest surviving
pieces, positively of English make, bear dates between
about 1580 and 1600 and were made on looms set up
at Barcheston, Warwickshire, by William Sheldon.
Some fragments of tapestry maps of English counties,
and other panels, have survived, and prove that Sheldon
sponsored excellent work. More important was the
factory started at Mortlake in 1620. This was under
the patronage of Charles I (both as Prince of Wales
and as King), and operated successfully until the
Civil War, which inevitably caused a decline in orders.
After 1670 little work was done at Mortlake, and
the factory removed eventually
to Soho, London, where production was continued throughout
the first half of the eighteenth century. Although
the later work was not of the outstanding quality
of the earlier Mortlake tapestry, it was adequate
for normal usage in both town and country.
Tapestry is subject to damage by that enemy of all
woollen fabrics: the moth. In addition, its very
size and weight lead to deterioration over the years,
and the action of sun, damp air and heat and smoke
from fires tends to perish the ageing fabric. Repair
is feasible, but is apt to be expensive as there
is a declining number of experts to whom such
work can be entrusted.
Almost all tapestries left the loom complete with
a border, varying in pattern from factory to factory
and over the years, after the manner of a picture
frame. In the course of time, these borders have
often been mutilated or replaced, and it should be
borne in mind by the collector that the presence
or absence of the original border greatly affects
the value of a panel.
back to antiques
guide home page ..
Aubusson
At Aubusson, also in France, tapestry panels, chair
covers and also tapestry carpets were made. Much
of the output dates from the nineteenth century,
although it is similar in pattern to work of an earlier
period.
|