Queen Victoria
Tapestry
1877 (made)
1877 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This portrait of Queen Victoria is possibly the first tapestry woven at the Royal Windsor Tapestry Company. It is taken from a painting by the Austrian artist Baron Heinrich von Angeli (1840-1925) completed at Windsor Castle in 1875.
This is a very suitable subject for the Royal Windsor Tapestry Company which was closely connected with the Royal family. Queen Victoria was Patron and her children were appointed Presidents and Vice Presidents. She made several visits there and recorded her favourable impressions in her diaries. In 1880 she consented to the manufactory being termed 'Royal'. The tapestry cartoon was drawn in 1876 by Phoebus Levin, a German painter working in London between 1855 and 1878. The tapestry bears the names of Michel Brignolas, who became the first Manager, and of Henri C. M. Henry, Art Director of Gillows, the Oxford Street decorators who founded the Royal Windsor Tapestry Company.
The Royal Windsor Tapestry company emulated the work of contemporary French establishments. It adopted the 'basse lisse' (low warp) technique favoured at the fashionable Beauvais factories. The tapestry was exhibited at the Paris International Exhibition of 1878. Here it was purchased by Sir Albert Sasoon for his home at 25 Kensington Gore, London.
This is a very suitable subject for the Royal Windsor Tapestry Company which was closely connected with the Royal family. Queen Victoria was Patron and her children were appointed Presidents and Vice Presidents. She made several visits there and recorded her favourable impressions in her diaries. In 1880 she consented to the manufactory being termed 'Royal'. The tapestry cartoon was drawn in 1876 by Phoebus Levin, a German painter working in London between 1855 and 1878. The tapestry bears the names of Michel Brignolas, who became the first Manager, and of Henri C. M. Henry, Art Director of Gillows, the Oxford Street decorators who founded the Royal Windsor Tapestry Company.
The Royal Windsor Tapestry company emulated the work of contemporary French establishments. It adopted the 'basse lisse' (low warp) technique favoured at the fashionable Beauvais factories. The tapestry was exhibited at the Paris International Exhibition of 1878. Here it was purchased by Sir Albert Sasoon for his home at 25 Kensington Gore, London.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Queen Victoria (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Tapestry woven in silk and wool |
Brief description | Tapestry portrait of Queen Victoria woven in silk and wool, copied by Phoebus Levin, after Heinrich Anton von Angeli, woven in Royal Windsor Tapestry Manufactory, Windsor, 1877 |
Physical description | Tapestry woven in silk and wool of Queen Victoria. The Queen is portrayed full face with her shoulders slightly turned. Her left hand clasps her right, which holds a scroll. She wears a black silk dress trimmed with ermine and lace, the ribbon and Order of the Garter, a pearl necklace, bracelet, brooch and rings, a lace headdress and a small crown. The portrait is bust length, set against a ground in varying shades of brown with, at the upper right, part of the Royal Arms surrounded by the Garter. This is cut by the curved rim of the round frame. |
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Gallery label |
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Object history | Commissioned by Gillow & Co., London, drawn by Phoebus Levin (born in Germany, worked in London 1855 to 1878) after a painting by Heinrich von Angeli (born in Odenburg, now Sopron, Hungary, 1840, died in Vienna, 1925); woven at the Royal Windsor Tapestry Manufactory, Windsor, Berkshire |
Summary | This portrait of Queen Victoria is possibly the first tapestry woven at the Royal Windsor Tapestry Company. It is taken from a painting by the Austrian artist Baron Heinrich von Angeli (1840-1925) completed at Windsor Castle in 1875. This is a very suitable subject for the Royal Windsor Tapestry Company which was closely connected with the Royal family. Queen Victoria was Patron and her children were appointed Presidents and Vice Presidents. She made several visits there and recorded her favourable impressions in her diaries. In 1880 she consented to the manufactory being termed 'Royal'. The tapestry cartoon was drawn in 1876 by Phoebus Levin, a German painter working in London between 1855 and 1878. The tapestry bears the names of Michel Brignolas, who became the first Manager, and of Henri C. M. Henry, Art Director of Gillows, the Oxford Street decorators who founded the Royal Windsor Tapestry Company. The Royal Windsor Tapestry company emulated the work of contemporary French establishments. It adopted the 'basse lisse' (low warp) technique favoured at the fashionable Beauvais factories. The tapestry was exhibited at the Paris International Exhibition of 1878. Here it was purchased by Sir Albert Sasoon for his home at 25 Kensington Gore, London. |
Bibliographic reference | Baker, Malcolm, and Brenda Richardson (eds.), A Grand Design: The Art of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London: V&A Publications, 1999.
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Collection | |
Accession number | T.94-1968 |
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Record created | March 27, 2003 |
Record URL |
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