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This beautifully preserved example is a valuable and instructive addition to the Metropolitan Museum's collection of eighteenth-century fabrics, as it relates to several major trends in the textile arts. The small compartmentalized areas with geometric designs in the manner of lace fillings, as well as the stylized floral bouquets, relate this textile to the so-called lace patterned silks, many of which are attributable to France. The imaginative small interstitial motifs are a hybrid of floral, geometric, and fantastic forms and recall elements found in bizarre silks, a group of disputed origin in part thought to be of Italian manufacture. Other characteristics, however, link the silk to a group of textiles tentatively established by Natalie Rothstein as Dutch. The narrow loom width of approximately sixteen inches is substantially less than that found in many other contemporary European textiles. The scale of the pattern is also reduced, but the precise drawing style and the allowance for space surrounding the motifs avoid any sense of compression or overcrowding. The color scheme of green ground with design in white and judiciously placed details in light and dark blue, pink and salmon, yellow and mustard, complements and further balances the composition. Although symmetrical patterns are not rare at this time, more unusual is the vertical emphasis which occurs when two or more lengths are placed selvage to selvage, thus completing the floral column. This strong visual accent suggests that the textile was probably intended as a furnishing fabric rather than as costume material.

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rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • 1720 / 1729
rdfs:comment
  • This beautifully preserved example is a valuable and instructive addition to the Metropolitan Museum's collection of eighteenth-century fabrics, as it relates to several major trends in the textile arts. The small compartmentalized areas with geometric designs in the manner of lace fillings, as well as the stylized floral bouquets, relate this textile to the so-called lace patterned silks, many of which are attributable to France. The imaginative small interstitial motifs are a hybrid of floral, geometric, and fantastic forms and recall elements found in bizarre silks, a group of disputed origin in part thought to be of Italian manufacture. Other characteristics, however, link the silk to a group of textiles tentatively established by Natalie Rothstein as Dutch. The narrow loom width of approximately sixteen inches is substantially less than that found in many other contemporary European textiles. The scale of the pattern is also reduced, but the precise drawing style and the allowance for space surrounding the motifs avoid any sense of compression or overcrowding. The color scheme of green ground with design in white and judiciously placed details in light and dark blue, pink and salmon, yellow and mustard, complements and further balances the composition. Although symmetrical patterns are not rare at this time, more unusual is the vertical emphasis which occurs when two or more lengths are placed selvage to selvage, thus completing the floral column. This strong visual accent suggests that the textile was probably intended as a furnishing fabric rather than as costume material. (en)
sameAs
dc:identifier
  • 1979.387.1
P3 has note
  • This beautifully preserved example is a valuable and instructive addition to the Metropolitan Museum's collection of eighteenth-century fabrics, as it relates to several major trends in the textile arts. The small compartmentalized areas with geometric designs in the manner of lace fillings, as well as the stylized floral bouquets, relate this textile to the so-called lace patterned silks, many of which are attributable to France. The imaginative small interstitial motifs are a hybrid of floral, geometric, and fantastic forms and recall elements found in bizarre silks, a group of disputed origin in part thought to be of Italian manufacture. Other characteristics, however, link the silk to a group of textiles tentatively established by Natalie Rothstein as Dutch. The narrow loom width of approximately sixteen inches is substantially less than that found in many other contemporary European textiles. The scale of the pattern is also reduced, but the precise drawing style and the allowance for space surrounding the motifs avoid any sense of compression or overcrowding. The color scheme of green ground with design in white and judiciously placed details in light and dark blue, pink and salmon, yellow and mustard, complements and further balances the composition. Although symmetrical patterns are not rare at this time, more unusual is the vertical emphasis which occurs when two or more lengths are placed selvage to selvage, thus completing the floral column. This strong visual accent suggests that the textile was probably intended as a furnishing fabric rather than as costume material. (en)
P43 has dimension
P65 shows visual item
P138 has representation
P102 has title
  • 1720 / 1729
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
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