History of Western Textiles (mine)
The Miraculous Draught of Fishes from the Acts of the Apostles tapestry series, cartoons by Raphael, woven in Brussels, 1519
- Raphael's influence on tapestry - More painterly, less figures
Bird Bone Needle, Denisova Cave, Siberia, 48,000 BCE - 50,000 years old - Used by another species, Denisovians, around the same time that Homo Sapiens existed - Proves that the embellishment of textiles is very old (even though we don't have those textiles
BONE NEEDLE
Last Surviving Dress of Elizabeth I, St. Faith's Barton Church, Herefordshire, England, 16th century - Embroidered panel being used as an alter cloth that was recently found to have belonged to Elizabeth - We have an entire written inventory of her clothes, but this is the only actual piece - Shows the incredible value of textiles - it was given as a gift to one of her servants - Textiles were too expensive and valuable to just be thrown out/preserved - they were reused, gifted, etc
ELIZABETH DRESS
Visite de Louis XIV a la Manufacture des Gobelins, le 15 Octobre 1667, from the History of the Kings Series, designed by Charles le Brun, woven at Gobelins, France, after 1667
GOBELINS VISIT
The Triumph of the Church, from the Triumph of the Eucharist series, designed by Peter Paul Rubens, woven in the workshop of Jan Raes, Brussels, 1628
HORSE BUTT
- Weft-faced compound twill - Look for the diagonal! - Longer floats, more shine - Consistent twill diagonals but with changes in color and pattern
Samite
Petit Patron for Trojan War themed tapestry, 1460 - 1465, South Netherlands (maybe)
TROJAN WAR PETIT PATRON
Scenes from the Story of the Trojan War, Tournai, South Netherlands, 1470 - 1490, Jean or Pasquier Grenier of Tournai (merchants)
TROJAN WAR TAP
warp-faced compound tabby, imitation of jin
Taquete
Jin
Warp-faced pattern silk with long floats (TABBY OR TWILL?)