Tapestry
1630s (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This tapestry fragment, woven with wool, silk and silver-gilt thread, is from a tapestry border designed by Francis Cleyn in the1630s, and woven at Mortlake. The tapestry workshop at Mortlake was established by Francis Crane under the patronage of King James I, and fifty Flemish weavers were brought there in 1620. Through their skill and the advantages of royal involvement, the workshop produced some of the finest tapestries in Europe during its first twenty years; the quality of these fragmentary pieces is testament to that.
We already have in the V&A's collection Perseus on Pegasus, the only surviving tapestry from the early Mortlake series The Horses, which is, however, missing its border. This fragment may be actually from the missing border, and is at least among a group of the only known survivors of the same border design. The design includes hippocamps, sea creatures half horse and half fish, which in mythology drew Neptune's chariot.
We already have in the V&A's collection Perseus on Pegasus, the only surviving tapestry from the early Mortlake series The Horses, which is, however, missing its border. This fragment may be actually from the missing border, and is at least among a group of the only known survivors of the same border design. The design includes hippocamps, sea creatures half horse and half fish, which in mythology drew Neptune's chariot.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Tapestry woven in wool, silk and metal thread |
Brief description | Fragment of tapestry border, woven in wool, silk and metal thread, Mortlake, 1630s |
Physical description | fragment of tapestry border depicting putto, woven in wool, silk and metal thread. |
Dimensions |
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Credit line | Given by Wendy Hefford |
Summary | This tapestry fragment, woven with wool, silk and silver-gilt thread, is from a tapestry border designed by Francis Cleyn in the1630s, and woven at Mortlake. The tapestry workshop at Mortlake was established by Francis Crane under the patronage of King James I, and fifty Flemish weavers were brought there in 1620. Through their skill and the advantages of royal involvement, the workshop produced some of the finest tapestries in Europe during its first twenty years; the quality of these fragmentary pieces is testament to that. We already have in the V&A's collection Perseus on Pegasus, the only surviving tapestry from the early Mortlake series The Horses, which is, however, missing its border. This fragment may be actually from the missing border, and is at least among a group of the only known survivors of the same border design. The design includes hippocamps, sea creatures half horse and half fish, which in mythology drew Neptune's chariot. |
Collection | |
Accession number | T.58-2005 |
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Record created | November 16, 2005 |
Record URL |
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