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  • Brussels Late 17th Century Tapestry Asia from a Four Continents Series 9'4 x 18
    Located in New York, NY
    Brussels late 17th century tapestry, "Asia" from a Four Continents series. Designed by Lodowijk van Schoor, Woven in the Workshop of J. van der Borcht I Size: 9'4 high x 18' wide. Wool, silk and metal thread pattern wefts This extremely colorful and attractive late Baroque Flemish tapestry with a popular iconography is the product of two important figures in 17th century Brussels weaving. J. van der Borcht I (circa 1650–1713) was a master weaver and tapestry entrepreneur who established a most distinguished family tapestry firm and was followed by J. van der Borcht II, Jasper van der Borcht, Pieter van der Borcht and Jan Frans van der Borcht, taking the operations into the mid18th century. Their wealthy patrons allowed the firm to engage some of the best designers and as a result the artistic quality, as well as the sheer technical execution, is always high. The Van der Borchts wove tapestry series (or single pieces) of Mythological Scenes, Months, Allegories, Armorials, Triumphs of the Gods, The Continents, as well as more down-to-earth genre scenes designed or inspired by David Teniers II or Teniers III. Their artist designers included, besides the Teniers, Jan van Orley, Augustin Coppens, Gerard Lairesse, Phillipe de Hondt, and the Antwerp-born Lodowijk van Schoor (circa 1650–1702), the designer of U-1362. Van Schoor was the successor of David Teniers III. He was the designer or co-creator of about fifteen sets of tapestries. His cartoons were utilized and copied in both the Northern and Southern Netherlands, and continued popular well into the 18th century. His style, especially in his later works, is more harmonious and refined than Teniers and he avoided genre scenes with peasants. Van Schoor sometimes collaborated with other artists, for example Lucas Aertschellinck (1620 – 1699) who specialized in landscape backgrounds as in the set of Mythological Scenes” woven circa 1700 in the Van der Borcht shop. He did not collaborate on this tapestry, Van Schoor’s figures are graceful and his color schemes vivid, in keeping with the best of contemporary Flemish tapestry. Van Schoor’s designs influenced artists working at great remove from Brussels, even so far as the Florentine workshop of Bernini and Demignot where a Van Schoor inspired “Four Continents” set was woven in the early 1720s. The “Four Continents” or “Four Parts of the World” was a popular theme in the 17th and 18th centuries for tapestry patrons. Each continent was identified by native peoples and animals: America (North and South together) by Indians and the Turkey bird...
    Category

    Antique 17th Century Belgian Tapestries

    Materials

    Wool

  • Long Vintage Tissue for Upholstery
    Located in Saint Ouen, FR
    Beautiful long tissue for upholstery with a floral design and nice colors. Mechanical Jaquar made.
    Category

    Late 20th Century French Victorian Tapestries

    Materials

    Cotton

  • Art Deco Tapisserie
    Located in Antwerp, BE
    Antique Art Deco velvet fabric. Persian style woven motif. Warm red, orange and black velvety surface. Dimensions: 257W x 135H cm.
    Category

    Vintage 1930s Dutch Art Deco Tapestries

    Materials

    Velvet

    Art Deco Tapisserie
    $572 Sale Price
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  • Antique Applique Suzani
    Located in Los Angeles, CA
    Beautifully detailed, this antique suzani has a mix of hand-embroidery work and applique design. All of the colors are vibrant and the craftmanship is extremely precise.
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    Early 20th Century Turkish Quilts and Blankets

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    Cotton, Silk

  • Pattern Series 1
    By Fort Makers, Naomi Clark
    Located in Brooklyn, NY
    Made in 2013 by Naomi Clark Wool blanket with dye, paint and appliqué Naomi Clark’s Quilt Paintings are made from vintage camp blankets culled f...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary American Other Tapestries

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  • Framed Pre-Columbian Textile Fragment from Chancay Culture
    Located in Atlanta, GA
    An antique pre-Columbia textile fragment likely from Peru Chancay culture in Central coast that thrived in the late Intermediate period/ late Horizon, A.D. 1200-1550. Abstract geomet...
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    Antique 15th Century and Earlier Peruvian Pre-Columbian Quilts and Blankets

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    Textile, Acrylic

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