Altar Frontal thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Altar Frontal

1670-1690 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Lace was among the most highly prized and expensive of all textiles in the 17th century. From the main centres of production in Italy and Flanders it was traded widely across Europe, and the industry responded quickly to changes in fashionable dress, as different styles came in and out of favour. In the 1660s, Venetian needle lace became the most fashionable lace, dominating the upper end of the market for both men’s and women’s dress.

The industry also expanded rapidly through the patronage of the Catholic Church. Italian lace-makers exaggerated the three-dimensional qualities of needle lace, and developed the technique of dividing up large patterns into manageable sections, enabling the production of large-scale ecclesiastical items like this altar frontal that were conspicuously extravagant.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Needle lace worked in linen thread
Brief description
Raised needle lace altar frontal, 1670-90, Italian
Physical description
Altar frontal of raised needle lace.
Dimensions
  • Length: 254cm
  • Width: 112cm
taken from register
Object history
Purchased in 1888 for £350 from lace dealers Messrs Haywards. The register has a comment from Mr S [Samuel] Chick : "For some years it ws in the possession of a dealer in Padua, where I frequently saw it, and I have heard them say it was formerly in some church, not I fancy in Florence but somewhere in Sardinia ."
Summary
Lace was among the most highly prized and expensive of all textiles in the 17th century. From the main centres of production in Italy and Flanders it was traded widely across Europe, and the industry responded quickly to changes in fashionable dress, as different styles came in and out of favour. In the 1660s, Venetian needle lace became the most fashionable lace, dominating the upper end of the market for both men’s and women’s dress.

The industry also expanded rapidly through the patronage of the Catholic Church. Italian lace-makers exaggerated the three-dimensional qualities of needle lace, and developed the technique of dividing up large patterns into manageable sections, enabling the production of large-scale ecclesiastical items like this altar frontal that were conspicuously extravagant.
Collection
Accession number
1217-1888

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Record createdOctober 24, 2008
Record URL
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