Tapestry thumbnail 1
Tapestry thumbnail 2
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Tapestry

1740-1760 (woven)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This tapestry comes from the celebrated Portières des Dieux series, designed by Claude Audran III (1658-1734) for the French royal tapestry manufactory, the Gobelins. The series depicts the four seasons and four elements and enjoyed such widespread popularity that it was re-woven continuously between 1700 and 1789.

Here the figure of Juno, the Goddess of Olympus and Jupiter's consort, personifies the element air; as punishment for disobeying Jupiter, she had once been suspended in the sky by a golden rope.

Seated in regal splendour, Juno holds her sceptre in her right hand, flanked on either side by two peacocks, her attribute. The delicate arabesques framing the goddess include a variety of wind instruments, such as pipes, hurdy gurdys and flutes, all references to the element she embodies.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Tapestry, woven in wool and silk
Brief description
Tapestry, wool and silk, 'Juno' or 'Air', Portières des Dieux, Gobelins; Paris, ca. 1740-1760
Physical description
Tapestry, silk and wool on woollen warps. 21 warps to the inch.
Dimensions
  • Weight: 36kg (cumulative)
  • Top width: 2610mm
  • Bottom width: 2550mm
  • Proper left length: 3370mm
  • Proper right length: 3320mm
Weight including roller. Roller shared with T.769-1950
Style
Credit line
Given by the Dowager Viscountess Harcourt GBE
Historical context
The series includes Diana, Neptune, Saturn, Jupiter, Bacchus, Venus, Ceres and Juno, all with their respective attributes. This series is not to be confused with Audran's later and quite similar series of arabesque portières: Les Mois (1709), which are smaller in scale and therefore suitable for residences other than royal palaces.
Subject depicted
Summary
This tapestry comes from the celebrated Portières des Dieux series, designed by Claude Audran III (1658-1734) for the French royal tapestry manufactory, the Gobelins. The series depicts the four seasons and four elements and enjoyed such widespread popularity that it was re-woven continuously between 1700 and 1789.

Here the figure of Juno, the Goddess of Olympus and Jupiter's consort, personifies the element air; as punishment for disobeying Jupiter, she had once been suspended in the sky by a golden rope.

Seated in regal splendour, Juno holds her sceptre in her right hand, flanked on either side by two peacocks, her attribute. The delicate arabesques framing the goddess include a variety of wind instruments, such as pipes, hurdy gurdys and flutes, all references to the element she embodies.
Associated objects
Collection
Accession number
T.768-1950

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Record createdFebruary 3, 2007
Record URL
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