Tapestry with the Coat of Arms of the Greder Family
Attributed to
Bacor Workshop
(French, 17th century)
Dateca. 1691-1694
MediumSilk and wool with metallic threads
DimensionsOverall: 110 × 116 inches (279.4 × 294.64 cm)
Credit LinePurchase: William Rockhill Nelson Trust
Object number32-191/3
On View
On viewGallery Location
- 114
Collections
DescriptionRepresenting coat of arms, two swans and arabesques. Ends are turned in.Gallery LabelOriginally created to function as a moveable form of decoration in the 14th century, tapestries had become a fixed and permanent element in interior spaces by the beginning of the 18th century. This French tapestry is from a set commissioned by François Laurent Greder to decorate his Swiss family's estate. Two quadrants of the coat of arms in the tapestry's center show a silver bird's leg and claw with fleurs-de-lis, which represent the Greder arms. The other quadrants contain five red roses each, which represent Blumenstein, a property of the Greder family. Greder was promoted to the rank of brigadier in the French army in 1691, and the pieces of armor at the bottom of the tapestry probably relate to his military career.
With Charles Michel, Paris, by October 1932;
Purchased from Michel, through the dealer Richard Owen, by The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO, 1932.
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