About the Collection
Transcription
About the Collection
Figure 1 Le Chasseur Indien Figure 2 Le Combat d’Animaux A Gobelin Collection Figure 3 Figure 4 Figure 5 Le Cheval Rayé Les Autruches Figure 6 Figure 7 L’Indien à Cheval Les Pêcheurs Figure 1 Replica of L’Indien à Cheval held at the Arader Galleries (New York) Figure 2 L’Indien à Cheval held at the Palace (Valletta) Figure 3 Replica of Le Roi Porté held at the Arader Galleries (New York) Figure 4 Le Roi Porté held at the Palace (Valletta) Figure 5 Replica of Le Cheval Rayé held at the Getty Museum (Los Angeles) Figure 6 Le Cheval Rayé held at the Palace (Valletta) Figure 7 The signature of the tapestry maker Etienne Le Blond The “Tenture des Indes” The “Tenture des Indes” T HE “Tenture des Indes” in the Sala del Maggior Consiglio were made at the Gobelin Manufactory in Paris and completed by March 1710. The Gobelin workshop came into being in 1450 as a dyeing factory in a Paris suburb, founded by Jean Gobelin. It evolved into a tapestry weaving factory thanks to two Flemish weavers, Marc de Comans and Francois de la Planche after they had been called to the Court of Henri IV in 1601. In 1662 the Gobelin workshop became a centre of excellence when Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Louis XIV’s minister of finance, took over the Gobelin manufactory on behalf of the Crown; its official title became Manufacture Royale des Meubles de la Couronne (Royal Factory of Furniture to the Crown). The first director, Charles Le Brun, orchestrated numerous craftsmen, including tapestry weavers, painters, bronze-workers, furniture-makers, and gold and silversmiths, who supplied objects exclusively for the king’s palaces or as royal gifts. As a result of financial difficulties, the factory was forced to close in 1694, reopening in 1699, but only to produce tapestries. The tapestries woven at the Gobelin manufactory were the finest of any produced in Europe in the 1600s and 1700s. Cartoons were ordered from leading painters such as Le Brun, Jean-Baptiste Oudry, Charles Coypel, and François Boucher. Skilled weavers were paid according to the difficulty of the work; those entrusted with heads and flesh tones received the highest wages. During the reign of Louis XIV, tapestries celebrated the glory of the Sun King, but eighteenth-century subjects were lighter and more frivolous. The most important innovation in eighteenth-century tapestries was the addition of alentours (borders). These wide frames depicted flowers and architectural devices surrounding a central scene. Tapestries also imitated the effects of painting, and hundreds of new dyes were developed to create a range of tonal effects. Unfortunately, the ravages of light have now destroyed most of these subtle effects. A rare sample of a complete Gobelin collection, sometimes called the Indian Hangings, can be seen at the Grandmaster’s Palace in Malta. The tapestries themselves were adapted from paintings at the request of Louis XIV and purchased by Grand Master Ramón Perellos y Roccaful. The first series of such tapestries was not executed until 1687, but between 1687 and 1730, eight sets of the Anciennes Indes were woven. Of the Anciennes Indes sets that were commissioned, the fifth was ordered by Perellos in 1708. The official contract for the works on the tapestries commissioned by Grand Master Ramón Perellos y Roccaful Perellos had left the entire direction of the commissioning to Jean Jacques de Mesmes, Commandeur de Sommereux, who proceeded to Paris, reached agreement with the Gobelin manufactory and on 22 October 1708 entered into a contract with the weaver then in charge of the Gobelin looms, Etienne Le Blond. The commission had to be finalised by March 1710. As the original Tenture des Indes cartoons consisted of eight compositions, agreement was reached that the design of L’Éléphant and Le Chasseur Indien were to be divided into two sections each, to better accommodate the wall area in the Council Chamber. The Commandeur de Mesmes eventually informed Perellos that the completed tapestries were sent to Malta on 2 June 1710. They duly arrived without mishap in Malta, and are still to be seen on the walls of the room for which they were woven. However the tapestries once more had to cross the Mediterranean at the end of the 1800s. After a visit to Malta by one of the Gobelin’s administrators (J. Guiffrey) in 1895, the tapestries were sent to the Gobelin manufactory to be restored. Work on them lasted several years and it was only in 1910 (the date inscribed on the blue border of the tapestry known as Les Deux Taureaux) that the final restoration was complete. Le Roi Porté L’Éléphant The “Tenture des Indes” in Malta has certain peculiarities which distinguish it from other sets of the same series. The set is woven in basse lisse and consists (instead of the usual eight) of ten tapestries. This is due to the fact that two are divided into two piece (L’Éléphant and Le Chasseur Indien). The subjects are entitled: Le Combat d’Animaux (470 by 458 cm); L’Indien à Cheval (470 by 350 cm); Les Deux Taureaux (470 by 511 cm); Le Cheval Rayé (470 by 504 cm); Le Roi Porté (470 by 450 cm); Le Chasseur Indien (470 by 430 cm); Les Pêcheurs (470 by 400 cm); Les Autruches (470 by 313 cm); Le Cheval Isabelle (470 by 298 cm); L’Éléphant (470 by 408 cm). In general, all the tapestries are wider than the original cartoons. Thus the one showing the Le Roi Porté is lengthened by the addition of enormous plants to the right and left of the King. Similarly L’Indien à Cheval has been enlarged in the same way with the help of a large colocynth in the shape of a pear (no doubt a reference to the coat of arms of Perellos which included pears). Le Cheval Isabelle Les Deux Taureaux Since the commission for the tapestries dated from 1708, it is interesting to note that they were executed on cartoons already retouched by Desportes who had been at work in 1692 and 1693, correcting the original cartoons made after the paintings of Eckhout, at a time when the haute lisse studios were entrused with the execution of the Tentures des Indes. At the time the Tenture des Indes enjoyed fame and celebrity as they were splendid illustrations of the exotic plant and animal kingdom of the New World. They were the result of studies made by two Dutch artists during an exploratory expedition to Brazil from 1637 to 1644 which led to the inspiration for this tapestry. The newly appointed Dutch governor, Prince Johan Maurits of Nassau, led a group of scientists and artists, including Albert Eckhout and Frans Post, to Brazil, where they studied and painted the unusual plant and animal life of this country. Many of the plants, fish, birds, and other animals woven in this hanging, can be traced to life studies made by Eckhout and Post in South America. French artists at the Gobelin manufactory, who designed the cartoon to heighten the tapestry’s impression of drama and exoticism, probably introduced other animals, such as the Indian rhinoceros and “striped horse” or zebra. The Coat of Arms of Grand Master Perellos