Raphael thumbnail 1
Raphael thumbnail 2
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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
British Galleries, Room 122

Raphael

Furnishing Fabric
1862 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is a woven furnishing silk of very high quality. It was shown in the South East Gallery of the International Exhibition of 1862 by the manufacturers Daniel Walters (Class XX, no. 3898). There is no firm evidence to suggest that Owen Jones (1809-1874) designed this silk although it is known that he was fascinated with Renaissance decoration. Furthermore, there is documentary evidence that he supplied Daniel Walters with at least three silk designs, the first woven in the early 1850s.

The design for the silk was taken from Raphael's decoration of the loggia of the Vatican and follows the 19th century fashion for repeating designs taken directly from historic architectural motifs. Owen Jones's 1856 publication The Grammar of Ornament illustrates a number of similar designs in the section devoted to Renaissance Ornament. In the introduction to this chapter Matthew Digby Wyatt, himself one of the most successful commercial designers of the period, recommends the reader to draw inspiration from such work in Rome 'even the great Raffaelle himself did not distain to design ornament for carvers, of the purest taste and most exquisite fancy'.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleRaphael (manufacturer's title)
Materials and techniques
Jacquard-woven silk
Brief description
'Raphael' furnishing fabric
Dimensions
  • Width: 21in (Note: Measurement transcribed from registered description.)
  • Length: 139 1/2in (Note: Measurement transcribed from registered description.)
Gallery label
British Galleries: The design for this silk was taken from decoration of the loggia in the Vatican, Rome, by the Italian artist Raphael (1443-1520). It follows the 19th-century fashion for taking designs from historic architectural motifs.The 1856 publication, 'The Grammar of Ornament', by the designer Owen Jones, illustrated similar designs in the section devoted to Renaissance ornament.(27/03/2003)
Object history
Possibly designed by Owen Jones (born in London, 1809, died there in 1874); made by Daniel Walters & Sons in Spitalfields, London

Exhibited at the London International Exhibition of 1862
Summary
This is a woven furnishing silk of very high quality. It was shown in the South East Gallery of the International Exhibition of 1862 by the manufacturers Daniel Walters (Class XX, no. 3898). There is no firm evidence to suggest that Owen Jones (1809-1874) designed this silk although it is known that he was fascinated with Renaissance decoration. Furthermore, there is documentary evidence that he supplied Daniel Walters with at least three silk designs, the first woven in the early 1850s.

The design for the silk was taken from Raphael's decoration of the loggia of the Vatican and follows the 19th century fashion for repeating designs taken directly from historic architectural motifs. Owen Jones's 1856 publication The Grammar of Ornament illustrates a number of similar designs in the section devoted to Renaissance Ornament. In the introduction to this chapter Matthew Digby Wyatt, himself one of the most successful commercial designers of the period, recommends the reader to draw inspiration from such work in Rome 'even the great Raffaelle himself did not distain to design ornament for carvers, of the purest taste and most exquisite fancy'.
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.299-1953

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Record createdMarch 27, 2003
Record URL
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