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Examples of this design exist in two colourways: with this light grey-blue ground (V Archangelskoye Palace, near Moscow); with a red ground (Abegg-Stiftung, Switzerland; Schloss Ludwigslust in northern Germany; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). According to the V&A Accession Register in 1936, the style of drawing and the weaving technique suggest it was made in France, probably Lyons, the premier centre of silk weaving at the time as it is reminiscent of François Boucher's designs. Subsequent research on the piece in the collection of the Abegg-Stiftung by Alain Gruber in the early 1980s is more precise "Pattern composed of the following elements taken from the famous designs by François Boucher for the tapestry weavers of Beauvais about 1742. The set was engraved by P.A. Aveline. The figures in the trellises and pavilions defote themselves to the joys of hunting, fishing, sailing and dancing". He dates the silk to 1742-5 and suggests France as the source. He notes that the silk in the Abegg-Stiftung collections comes from a château in Piedmont (satin liseré et broché, liage repris; H. 205 cm, width 78.8 cm; pattern repeat 416 cm) and that there is a similar piece in the aforementioned palace, near Moscow. This palace was is built in a neoclassical style by the French architect Jacob Guerne (1748-97), the main building dating to 1790. It belonged to the Goltisyn family between 1703 and 1810. Bibl. Alain Gruber, Chinoiserie. L'Influence de la Chine sur les arts en Europe XVIIe-XIXe siècle. Exh. cat., Abegg-Stiftung Bern in Riggisberg, 1984, pp. 46, 48-9. MFA Boston describes its piece as "Fragment of a wall covering, possibly Dutch, mid-18th century". It was acquired in Europe by Adolph Loewi, Los Angeles and sold to the MFA for $950 (Accession Date: June 14, 1951). Two widths: 101 x 78.7 cm and 110.5 x 77.5 cm. http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/fragment-of-a-wall-covering-74587 Current thinking (2018) suggests that it may indeed be Dutch because of the width of the silk, which was typical of production there, and also because of the treatment of the dark areas of the design.

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  • Examples of this design exist in two colourways: with this light grey-blue ground (V&A; Archangelskoye Palace, near Moscow); with a red ground (Abegg-Stiftung, Switzerland; Schloss Ludwigslust in northern Germany; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). According to the V&A Accession Register in 1936, the style of drawing and the weaving technique suggest it was made in France, probably Lyons, the premier centre of silk weaving at the time as it is reminiscent of François Boucher's designs. Subsequent research on the piece in the collection of the Abegg-Stiftung by Alain Gruber in the early 1980s is more precise "Pattern composed of the following elements taken from the famous designs by François Boucher for the tapestry weavers of Beauvais about 1742. The set was engraved by P.A. Aveline. The figures in the trellises and pavilions defote themselves to the joys of hunting, fishing, sailing and dancing". He dates the silk to 1742-5 and suggests France as the source. He notes that the silk in the Abegg-Stiftung collections comes from a château in Piedmont (satin liseré et broché, liage repris; H. 205 cm, width 78.8 cm; pattern repeat 416 cm) and that there is a similar piece in the aforementioned palace, near Moscow. This palace was is built in a neoclassical style by the French architect Jacob Guerne (1748-97), the main building dating to 1790. It belonged to the Goltisyn family between 1703 and 1810. Bibl. Alain Gruber, Chinoiserie. L'Influence de la Chine sur les arts en Europe XVIIe-XIXe siècle. Exh. cat., Abegg-Stiftung Bern in Riggisberg, 1984, pp. 46, 48-9. MFA Boston describes its piece as "Fragment of a wall covering, possibly Dutch, mid-18th century". It was acquired in Europe by Adolph Loewi, Los Angeles and sold to the MFA for $950 (Accession Date: June 14, 1951). Two widths: 101 x 78.7 cm and 110.5 x 77 5 cm. http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/fragment-of-a-wall-covering 74587 Current thinking (2018) suggests that it may indeed be Dutch because of the width of the silk, which was typical of production there, and also because of the treatment of the dark areas of the design.
P3 has note
  • Examples of this design exist in two colourways: with this light grey-blue ground (V&A; Archangelskoye Palace, near Moscow); with a red ground (Abegg-Stiftung, Switzerland; Schloss Ludwigslust in northern Germany; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). According to the V&A Accession Register in 1936, the style of drawing and the weaving technique suggest it was made in France, probably Lyons, the premier centre of silk weaving at the time as it is reminiscent of François Boucher's designs. Subsequent research on the piece in the collection of the Abegg-Stiftung by Alain Gruber in the early 1980s is more precise "Pattern composed of the following elements taken from the famous designs by François Boucher for the tapestry weavers of Beauvais about 1742. The set was engraved by P.A. Aveline. The figures in the trellises and pavilions defote themselves to the joys of hunting, fishing, sailing and dancing". He dates the silk to 1742-5 and suggests France as the source. He notes that the silk in the Abegg-Stiftung collections comes from a château in Piedmont (satin liseré et broché, liage repris; H. 205 cm, width 78.8 cm; pattern repeat 416 cm) and that there is a similar piece in the aforementioned palace, near Moscow. This palace was is built in a neoclassical style by the French architect Jacob Guerne (1748-97), the main building dating to 1790. It belonged to the Goltisyn family between 1703 and 1810. Bibl. Alain Gruber, Chinoiserie. L'Influence de la Chine sur les arts en Europe XVIIe-XIXe siècle. Exh. cat., Abegg-Stiftung Bern in Riggisberg, 1984, pp. 46, 48-9. MFA Boston describes its piece as "Fragment of a wall covering, possibly Dutch, mid-18th century". It was acquired in Europe by Adolph Loewi, Los Angeles and sold to the MFA for $950 (Accession Date: June 14, 1951). Two widths: 101 x 78.7 cm and 110.5 x 77 5 cm. http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/fragment-of-a-wall-covering 74587 Current thinking (2018) suggests that it may indeed be Dutch because of the width of the silk, which was typical of production there, and also because of the treatment of the dark areas of the design.
P108 has produced
P32 used general technique
P126 employed
  • Silk
  • satin weave ground (en)
  • silk, brocaded (en)
P4 has time-span
P8 took place on or within
is P129 is about of
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