A FLEMISH PASTORAL TAPESTRY
PROPERTY OF A LADY 
A FLEMISH PASTORAL TAPESTRY

BRUSSELS, FIRST QUARTER 17TH CENTURY, BY JAN RAES THE YOUNGER, IN THE MANNER OF JACOB JORDAENS

细节
A FLEMISH PASTORAL TAPESTRY
BRUSSELS, FIRST QUARTER 17TH CENTURY, BY JAN RAES THE YOUNGER, IN THE MANNER OF JACOB JORDAENS
Depicting a mounted rider in courtly dress from 'The Riding School Series', with a mountainous landscape to the background, the upper stylised foliate border centred by a strapwork catrouche with a landscape, the top and bottom border cut and reattached, the bottom with Brussels town mark and signed 'IAN.RAS.LE.JEVNE'
10 ft. 8 in. x 6 ft. 4 in. (325 cm. x 194 cm.)

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Arne Everwijn
Arne Everwijn

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This series is first mentioned in 1651 when the Antwerp merchant Frans Smit records handing Pieter van Houte and Pieter Thonnet the designs for the series drawn by Jacob Jordaens. Jordaens took inspiration from the engravings of Crispyn van de Passe the Younger in A. Pluvinel's L'Instruction du Roy en l'exercise de monter à cheval of 1623. There were two differing sizes woven, The Large Riding School and The Small Riding School. The most important version of The Large Riding School was probably that supplied to Emperor Leopold I through the merchant Bartholomäus Triangl in 1666 which is today at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. The only surviving set of The Small Riding School, which has a lower horizon and is generally somewhat more somber than The Large Riding School is that at Hluboka Castle, Czech Republic, and includes a panel of identical subject to the offered lot (J. Duverger, 'De Rijschool of Grote en Kleine Paarden in de XVIIe Eeuwse Tapijtkunst', Het Herfsttij van de Vlaamse Tapijtkunst, Brussels, 1959, p. 143). The designs of The Small Riding School are sufficiently different from The Large Riding School that it is believ...

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