About: 1520~ / 1525~, Brussels     Goto   Sponge   NotDistinct   Permalink

An Entity of Type : ecrm:E22_Man-Made_Object, within Data Space : data.silknow.org associated with source document(s)

The bound Christ, humiliated and all but naked, mockingly draped in an imperial purple cloak and thorny crown, is presented to the jeering crowd, as described in the Bible (John, 19:5), the inscription woven in gilded silver, “ECCE HOMO” declaring ‘here is the man’. In a device popularized by Albrecht Dürer, the crowd is not actually represented; instead, it is as if his tormenters present Christ directly to us, the tapestry’s viewers, making us complicit in his degradation and rendering this hanging ideal as a tool for devotional contemplation and meditation.This small hanging combines tapestry conventions, like the decorative border filled with beautifully observed fruit, flora and foliage, with compositional devices more typical of contemporary panel paintings, like the half-length devotional format, and the foreground ledge and slightly awkward, encroaching architectural setting. This tapestry’s design reuses a prototype almost certainly created in the workshop of the successful Antwerp-based artist, Quentin Metsys, and disseminated in numerous paintings; a painted version attributed to Metsys, particularly closely related to this tapestry’s design, is in the Doge’s Palace, Venice. Like The Met’s tapestry 32.100.389, this is one of a sizeable group of smaller-scale devotional tapestries produced by talented weavers almost certainly working in Brussels- the center of excellence of figurative tapestry weaving throughout the late fifteenth and the sixteenth centuries- and probably made on speculation for sale on the open market.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • 1520~ / 1525~, Brussels
rdfs:comment
  • The bound Christ, humiliated and all but naked, mockingly draped in an imperial purple cloak and thorny crown, is presented to the jeering crowd, as described in the Bible (John, 19:5), the inscription woven in gilded silver, “ECCE HOMO” declaring ‘here is the man’. In a device popularized by Albrecht Dürer, the crowd is not actually represented; instead, it is as if his tormenters present Christ directly to us, the tapestry’s viewers, making us complicit in his degradation and rendering this hanging ideal as a tool for devotional contemplation and meditation.This small hanging combines tapestry conventions, like the decorative border filled with beautifully observed fruit, flora and foliage, with compositional devices more typical of contemporary panel paintings, like the half-length devotional format, and the foreground ledge and slightly awkward, encroaching architectural setting. This tapestry’s design reuses a prototype almost certainly created in the workshop of the successful Antwerp-based artist, Quentin Metsys, and disseminated in numerous paintings; a painted version attributed to Metsys, particularly closely related to this tapestry’s design, is in the Doge’s Palace, Venice. Like The Met’s tapestry 32.100.389, this is one of a sizeable group of smaller-scale devotional tapestries produced by talented weavers almost certainly working in Brussels- the center of excellence of figurative tapestry weaving throughout the late fifteenth and the sixteenth centuries- and probably made on speculation for sale on the open market. (en)
sameAs
dc:identifier
  • 06.301
P3 has note
  • The bound Christ, humiliated and all but naked, mockingly draped in an imperial purple cloak and thorny crown, is presented to the jeering crowd, as described in the Bible (John, 19:5), the inscription woven in gilded silver, “ECCE HOMO” declaring ‘here is the man’. In a device popularized by Albrecht Dürer, the crowd is not actually represented; instead, it is as if his tormenters present Christ directly to us, the tapestry’s viewers, making us complicit in his degradation and rendering this hanging ideal as a tool for devotional contemplation and meditation.This small hanging combines tapestry conventions, like the decorative border filled with beautifully observed fruit, flora and foliage, with compositional devices more typical of contemporary panel paintings, like the half-length devotional format, and the foreground ledge and slightly awkward, encroaching architectural setting. This tapestry’s design reuses a prototype almost certainly created in the workshop of the successful Antwerp-based artist, Quentin Metsys, and disseminated in numerous paintings; a painted version attributed to Metsys, particularly closely related to this tapestry’s design, is in the Doge’s Palace, Venice. Like The Met’s tapestry 32.100.389, this is one of a sizeable group of smaller-scale devotional tapestries produced by talented weavers almost certainly working in Brussels- the center of excellence of figurative tapestry weaving throughout the late fifteenth and the sixteenth centuries- and probably made on speculation for sale on the open market. (en)
P65 shows visual item
P138 has representation
P102 has title
  • 1520~ / 1525~, Brussels
is P30 transferred custody of of
is P106 is composed of of
is P41 classified of
is P108 has produced of
is rdf:subject of
is P129 is about of
is P24 transferred title of of
is crmsci:O8_observed of
Faceted Search & Find service v1.16.112 as of Mar 01 2023


Alternative Linked Data Documents: ODE     Content Formats:   [cxml] [csv]     RDF   [text] [turtle] [ld+json] [rdf+json] [rdf+xml]     ODATA   [atom+xml] [odata+json]     Microdata   [microdata+json] [html]    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3236 as of Mar 1 2023, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-musl), Single-Server Edition (126 GB total memory, 29 GB memory in use)
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2024 OpenLink Software