Tapestry: Armorial Shield C, fragment from THE STORY OF PENELOPE AND THE STORY OF THE CIMBRI WOMEN (from the series THE STORIES OF VIRTUOUS WOMEN)
about 1480–83
Object PlaceFrance or the Franco-Flemish Terirtories
Medium/TechniqueTapestry weave (wool warp; wool wefts)
Dimensions54 x 39 cm (21 1/4 x 15 3/8 in.)
Credit LineMaria Antoinette Evans Fund
Accession number26.60
On View
Not on viewClassificationsTextiles
Collections
ProvenanceAbout 1480/1483, Cardinal Ferry de Clugny (b. 1410 - d. 1483), Autun, Burgundy [see note 1]; 1483, upon his death, to his nephew, Guillaume de Clugny; to his son, Louis de Clugny and his wife, Marie de Chaugy; passed within her family to Claude-Augustine Chaugny and her husband, Pierre Le Belin, Dijon; to their son, Jean-Jacques Le Belin (b. 1645 – d. 1710), Dijon; bequeathed by Belin to Francois Guyet (b. 1663 – d. 1736) and his wife, Claudine Quarré (b. 1662 – d. 1749), Lyon [see note 2]; to their daughter, Philibert Guyet, Comtesse de Chamillart; 1750, sold by the Comtesse de Chamillart to Charles-Antoine, Marquis de Clugny (b. 1700 – d. 1779), Chateau de Thenissey, Côte-d'Or, France; to his son, Francois Victor de Clugny (d. 1782), Chateau de Thenissey; to his son, Charles-Louis de Clugny (d. 1793) and his wife, Marie Charlotte Alexandrine de Lannoy (b. 1761 – d. 1816), Chateau de Thenissey; about 1791, after a fire at Chateau de Thenissey, removed and taken to Chateau de Jours-les-Baigneux; 1793, confiscated and sold at auction, probably as national property [see note 3]; returned to or reacquired by Marie Charlotte Alexandrine de Lannoy and her second husband, Joseph Guy Louis Dominique de Tulles, Marquis de Villefranche (b. 1768 – d. 1847), Chateau de Thenissey [see note 4]; until 1926, by descent within the family, Chateau de Thenissey; 1926, sold from the collection of the Comte de Marenches to the MFA for $45,000. (Accession Date: March 4, 1926)
NOTES:
[1] This is one in a series of ten tapestries commissioned by Ferry de Clugny; damaged in a fire during the 18th century, eight fragments remain and are now at the MFA (accession nos. 26.53 – 26.60). On their early history, see Vicomte L. de Varax, Les Tapisseries du Cardinal de Clugny (Lyon, 1926) and Jean-Bernard de Vaivre, “Aspects du mécénat des Clugny au XV siècle,” Comtes rendus des séances de l’Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres 152, no. 2 (2008): pp. 532-533.
[2] According to Varax 1926 (as above, note 1), Guyet was Jean-Jacques Le Belin’s son-in-law.
[3] Achille Joubinal, “Tapisseries,” in Le Moyen Age et la Renaissance: Histoire et Description, vol. 2 (Paris, 1849), VII. The Chateau des Jours-les-Baigneux was nationalized during the French Revolution.
[4] The tapestries were at the Chateau de Thenissey again in the nineteenth century, and remained there until the time they were sold.
NOTES:
[1] This is one in a series of ten tapestries commissioned by Ferry de Clugny; damaged in a fire during the 18th century, eight fragments remain and are now at the MFA (accession nos. 26.53 – 26.60). On their early history, see Vicomte L. de Varax, Les Tapisseries du Cardinal de Clugny (Lyon, 1926) and Jean-Bernard de Vaivre, “Aspects du mécénat des Clugny au XV siècle,” Comtes rendus des séances de l’Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres 152, no. 2 (2008): pp. 532-533.
[2] According to Varax 1926 (as above, note 1), Guyet was Jean-Jacques Le Belin’s son-in-law.
[3] Achille Joubinal, “Tapisseries,” in Le Moyen Age et la Renaissance: Histoire et Description, vol. 2 (Paris, 1849), VII. The Chateau des Jours-les-Baigneux was nationalized during the French Revolution.
[4] The tapestries were at the Chateau de Thenissey again in the nineteenth century, and remained there until the time they were sold.
3rd-4th century AD
Barberini Manufactory
1663–1679
Barberini Manufactory
1663–1679
second half of 14th century or later
Second half of the 16th century or first quarter of the 17th century