As far back as the ancient Greeks, hand-woven tapestry art was believed to be an important means for decorating affluent homes and important buildings. Tapestry art was even thought to have covered the walls of the Parthenon.
During the Middle Ages and through the Hundred Years war, France was considered the world’s most important producer of tapestry, with Paris being the tapestry capital of the western world. Unfortunately, during Hundred years War, with pillaging and unrest, many woven tapestry pieces were lost or burned for their precious metal content. Eventually tapestry artists, skilled dyers and tapestry craftsmen moved north towards Flanders into what today is called Holland and Belgium.
Today, most surviving pieces of original hand-woven tapestry art are from the 16th to the 19th century. During that time construction consisted mainly of Picardy wool, Italian silk, and gold and silver threads imported from Cyprus.
Between the
These provincial manufacturing centers did not (and could not) compete with the French royal factories founded by Louis XlV at GOBELINS (1662), Beauvais, and AUBUSSON (1665). These factories dominated European production for nearly two centuries with tapestry series designed by France’s greatest painters, including Charles Le Brun, Jean Baptiste Oudry, and Fransois Boucher; the last two worked both for Gobleins and Beauvais.
During the 16th and 17th centuries, Brussels became the capital of European
The Shorter Oxford Dictionary defines a symbol as “something that stands for, represents, or denotes something else, not by exact resemblance but by vague suggestion; an object representing something sacred”.
The techniques of the tapestry repertoire have survived into the twenty-first century in spite of their painstaking and slow methods, the meticulous dyeing and mixing of colors, and the cost of the very special materials.
Every building, whether large or small, has inherited problems for the tapestry artist.
Independent weavers have the freedom to work at any size. Many of them like small works because they are relatively quick and easy to weave, and less expensive than larger pieces. Small tapestries are also simple to incorporate into modern domestic interiors, where they can be fixed as small hangings and hung as pictures.
During the 1970s and 1980s weavers in Japan and other Far-Eastern countries introduced revolutionary changes, using paper and other fibers to construct flat and three-dimensional objects in what is now called “Fiber art”.
Machine-made copies of traditional tapestries woven on Jacquard looms are different from