A FRENCH MYTHOLOGICAL TAPESTRY
PROPERTY OF A LADY (LOT 431)
A FRENCH MYTHOLOGICAL TAPESTRY

GOBELINS, LATE 17TH/EARLY 18TH CENTURY, AFTER LOUIS DE BOULOGNE

细节
A FRENCH MYTHOLOGICAL TAPESTRY
GOBELINS, LATE 17TH/EARLY 18TH CENTURY, AFTER LOUIS DE BOULOGNE
Depicting 'Rinaldo and Armida' from the series of 'Ovid's Metamorphoses', reduced in size and lacking borders, with patching to lower end, restored horizontal cut across the top
8 ft. 1 in. (247 cm.) high, 5 ft. 9½ in. (176 cm.) wide

荣誉呈献

Anne Igelbrink
Anne Igelbrink

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拍品专文

THE SERIES
The offered lot belongs to a series that is first mentioned in 1680. The original seven subjects were subsequently expanded by a further fifteen panels, known as petite tenture, that were in part based on paintings paid for between 1704 and 1706 by such artists as Jean Baptiste de Fontenay, Louis de Boulogne, Nicolas Bertin, Antoine Coypel and Charles de la Fosse. These tapestries appear to have initially only been woven for private patrons and Gobelins only records the first official production of seven of these subjects for Louis XIV in 1714. The cartoons for the series are last mentioned in 1736 as ruined. It can thus be assumed that the series was woven between 1680 and 1736.

WEAVER
Numerous Gobelins weavers are known to have woven this series in their private workshops but possibly also in the official ateliers of the Gobelins for private patrons. An attribution is thus not possible without a signature on the tapestry.

(E. Standen, Ovid's Metamorphoses: A Gobelins Tapestry Series, Metropolitan Museum Journal, 1988, pp. 149 - 191)