Printed Linen
ca. 1350-1400 (made), January 1895 (painted)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Painting or applying colour to textiles dates back nearly two thousand years. However, little is known about printing or the makers of printed textiles in the 14th century, the period to which this piece can be dated stylistically. Its flowing pattern, composed of flowering vines, birds and beasts, appears to be typical of the second quarter of the century and may emulate the patterns on expensive woven silks. If so, the printed version was probably cheaper and made the design more accessible to consumers of limited means.
The first reference to European textile printing dates to the early fifteenth century when it is mentioned in trade regulations in Florence. The technique was described in a treatise published by the Italian painter Cennino Cennini in 1437, and had spread to Germany and England by the last quarter of the century, and to Sweden by the early sixteenth century. It was similar to the method used to create woodcut illustrations in books: a wooden block was engraved with an image or pattern, pigment was applied to its surface, and it was then stamped on to linen.
The first reference to European textile printing dates to the early fifteenth century when it is mentioned in trade regulations in Florence. The technique was described in a treatise published by the Italian painter Cennino Cennini in 1437, and had spread to Germany and England by the last quarter of the century, and to Sweden by the early sixteenth century. It was similar to the method used to create woodcut illustrations in books: a wooden block was engraved with an image or pattern, pigment was applied to its surface, and it was then stamped on to linen.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Parts | This object consists of 2 parts.
|
Materials and techniques | Woven linen printed with grey (probably faded from black) design, mounted on hand-painted card |
Brief description | Linen, block-printed grey (black) on natural creamy colour, possibly 1350-1400, Italian or North European; motif of birds and foliage |
Physical description | This irregular linen fragment, woven in herringbone (broken twill) pattern, is block printed with a medium-grey design, probably originally black. The design depicts: 1. Birds, possibly peacocks or phoenix. 2. Vine motif with leaves and stylised flowers. 3. Lozenge motif containing Maltese cross/four petalled flower. The orientation of the design is aligned with the warp. The fragment is mounted on a 1890s hand-painted reconstruction of the pattern. |
Dimensions |
|
Object history | Historical significance: Rare example of an early printed textile of a relatively under-documented type. |
Historical context | The origin of these textiles is open to debate. In the Museum's original accession register entry they were attributed to Germany, although more recently very similar pieces have been labelled in the museum as Italian (monochromatic prints with brocaded-silk style designs). A smaller fragment of this textile is also in the collection (7027-1860), as well as three fragments of blue dyed linen (7095-1860, 7095A-1860, and 1514-1899) that have a print which is identical to that upon a silk dalmatic preserved in Straslund. This print features a bird, probably a heron or a crane, reacting to a lion-like animal, entwined with flowing vines and foliage. It seems possible that the printed textiles emulated more expensive woven silks, making identical patterns and designs more accessible to consumers of limited means, although even so, they would not have been "cheap". Little is known about printed linens of this period. Studies of medieval textiles often focus upon the weaving industry, or upon decorated silk and woollen textiles. Painters of the period seem to have favoured plain linen and cotton over their printed equivalents, reserving their portrayals of patterned textiles for silks and woollens. However, these flowing patterns, composed of flowering vines, and often incorporating birds and beasts, appear to be typical of the 2nd quarter of the 14th century (See Crowfoot et al., Textiles and Clothing. Museum of London, 2001, pp. 101 & 117). - Daniel Milford-Cottam (2006) |
Production | Originally accessioned as Flemish. Similar textiles in collection labelled as German. |
Summary | Painting or applying colour to textiles dates back nearly two thousand years. However, little is known about printing or the makers of printed textiles in the 14th century, the period to which this piece can be dated stylistically. Its flowing pattern, composed of flowering vines, birds and beasts, appears to be typical of the second quarter of the century and may emulate the patterns on expensive woven silks. If so, the printed version was probably cheaper and made the design more accessible to consumers of limited means. The first reference to European textile printing dates to the early fifteenth century when it is mentioned in trade regulations in Florence. The technique was described in a treatise published by the Italian painter Cennino Cennini in 1437, and had spread to Germany and England by the last quarter of the century, and to Sweden by the early sixteenth century. It was similar to the method used to create woodcut illustrations in books: a wooden block was engraved with an image or pattern, pigment was applied to its surface, and it was then stamped on to linen. |
Associated object | 7027-1860 (Version) |
Other number | 2-1895 - Current object number |
Collection | |
Accession number | 8615-1863 |
About this object record
Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.
You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.
Suggest feedback
You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.
Suggest feedback
Record created | February 7, 2008 |
Record URL |
Download as: JSONIIIF Manifest