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6 articles
Article
The 1st Duke of Devonshire’s ‘Queen Mary’ beds at Devonshire House, Chatsworth and Hardwick Hall
08/2024 | 1457 | 166
Pages: 781–809
related names
Author:
Fryman, Olivia (Fryman, Olivia)
Author:
Wood, Lucy (Wood, Lucy)
Subjects
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Detail of Fig.18, showing the crimson velvet bed from Queen Mary of Modena’s Great Bedchamber at Whitehall Palace, much altered in its final guise at Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire.
Attributed works:
10. Armchair (one of a pair) made to accompany the bed shown in Fig.1, attributed to Thomas Roberts. c.1697–1702. Walnut and beech, the loose back and seat covered in velvet with applied metal-thread embroidery, height 138 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1127755.2).
Attributed works:
11. Stool from a set of six made en suite with the armchair shown in Fig.10, attributed to Thomas Roberts. c.1697–1702. Walnut and beech, the loose squab seat covered in velvet with applied metalthread embroidery, 51 by 66 by 51 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1127754.5).
Attributed works:
12. Detail of the armchair shown in in Fig.10, showing the outside-back with its loose upholstered frame. Note the horizontal orientation of the velvet selvage, at right-angles to the vertical cords.
Attributed works:
13. The Long Gallery at Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire. After 1858. Pencil, pen and brown ink, and watercolour on paper, 36.8 by 54.6 cm. (Private collection; courtesy Lowell Libson & Jonny Yarker Ltd).
Attributed works:
14. The High Great Chamber at Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, by Henry Shaw. Lithograph, 25 by 35.7 cm. The bed appears as in Shaw’s earlier engraving (Fig.15), but here with the bed feet included. The armchairs, one of which is shown in Fig.10, are placed under the canopy at the far end of the room, but there is no sign of the stools (Fig.11). (From P.F. Robinson: Vitruvius Britannicus, Part III, History Of Hardwicke Hall: Illustrated By Plans, Elevations, And Internal Views Of The Apartments, From Actual Measurement, London 1835, facing p.12; British Library, London).
Attributed works:
15. Velvet bed, with gold & silver ornaments, at Hardwicke Hall, Derbyshire, after Henry Shaw. 1834. Lithograph, 29 by 22.5 cm. (From Specimens of Ancient Furniture Drawn from Existing Authorities by Henry Shaw F.S.A. with Descriptions by Sir Samuel Rush Meyrick, K.H. L.L.D. and F.S.A., London 1836 [folio edition], plate 40; National Art Library, London, 57.E.9).
Attributed works:
16. The plate in Fig.15 as reproduced in the quarto edition of the book. 1834. Lithograph, 27.8 by 21.5 cm. (National Art Library, London, 57.C.7).
Attributed works:
17. Detail of Chair in the State Room [High Great Chamber] at Hardwicke Hall, Derbyshire, by Henry Shaw. Lithograph. (From Specimens of Ancient Furniture Drawn from Existing Authorities by Henry Shaw F.S.A. with Descriptions by Sir Samuel Rush Meyrick, K.H. L.L.D. and F.S.A., London 1833, plate 17; National Art Library, London, 57.E.9).
Attributed works:
18. The High Great Chamber at Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, attributed to W.H.L. Price. ?1838. Watercolour, ink and gouache on paper, 46 by 61 cm. (sight size). (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1130055).
Attributed works:
19. The High Great Chamber at Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, by W.H.L. Price. Probably c.1844–45. Watercolour over pencil heightened with bodycolour on paper, 48.2 by 61 cm. (sight size). (Devonshire Collections, Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, WC 82; reproduced by permission of the Chatsworth Settlement Trustees).
Attributed works:
2. William Cavendish, 1st Duke of Devonshire, by Godfrey Kneller. c.1700. Oil on canvas, 72 by 56.5 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire).
Attributed works:
20. The window bay in the High Great Bedchamber at Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, attributed to Lady Louisa Egerton. 1850s. Watercolour, graphite and gum arabic on paper, 32.9 by 23.1 cm. (From an extra-illustrated copy of the 6th Duke of Devonshire’s Handbook of Chatsworth and Hardwick, London 1845, p.186B; Devonshire Collections, Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, DEV/010030.6; reproduced by permission of the Chatsworth Settlement Trustees).
Attributed works:
21. A bed foot, by Lady Louisa Egerton. Watercolour and graphite on paper, 14.9 by 15 cm. (From an extra-illustrated copy of the 6th Duke of Devonshire’s Handbook of Chatsworth and Hardwick, London 1845, p.188B; Devonshire Collections, Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, DEV/010030.6; reproduced by permission of the Chatsworth Settlement Trustees).
Attributed works:
22. The Library (now the State Drawing Room), Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, by William Collingwood-Smith. After 1858. Watercolour on paper, 35 by 51 cm. (sight size). (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1130053).
Attributed works:
23. Detail of Fig.22, showing parts of the crimson velvet bed curtains (or possibly cantoons) adapted to hang as screens over hinged rods.
Attributed works:
24. Detail of Fig.25, showing the bottom-left corner.
Attributed works:
25. Detail of a crimson velvet panel, with metal-thread embroidery reapplied. Modern hooks are fitted along the top edge (at top left in this view), indicating that this piece has been altered again in the twentieth century. Height 154.5 cm.; width of full panel 171.5 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1129667.4).
Attributed works:
26. Detail of the striped silk and linen lining surviving on one large curtain panel of the crimson velvet bed, replacing the eighteenthcentury lining. c.1825–34. Width repeat (each pair of red and cream stripes) approximately 4.3 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1129667.1).
Attributed works:
27 and 28. Two of three remnants of the cushion covers made from the crimson velvet bed hangings in about 1858. 47 by 59 cm. and 54.4 by 61 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1129667.7 and 8).
Attributed works:
29. One of two similar long panels of crimson velvet, each pieced together, with the metal-thread embroidery reapplied (relined on the back in the twentieth century). 266 by 64 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1129667.3).
Attributed works:
3. Bird’s-eye view of Whitehall Palace, London, attributed to Leonard Knyff. c. 1695–97. Brown ink and wash on paper, 78.7 by 55.3 cm. This view shows the state apartments used by Mary of Modena running eastwest away from the river and overlooking the formal gardens to the south (on the left of the image). The new apartments built for Mary of Modena in 1688, but only completed for Mary II, ran north–south along the river front. The new building, which overlooked the north half of the riverside privy garden, is shown with six bays and a central pediment. (Westminster City Library, London).
Attributed works:
30. Stool squab, with embroidery mounted on later velvet, trimmed with a single cord on each side. Beech frame with original linen or hemp base cloth, c.42 by c.64 by c.14.5 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1127754.1).
Attributed works:
31. Stool squab similar to the squab in Fig.30, but with embroidery of a different pattern. Beech frame with original linen or hemp base cloth, embroidery remounted on later velvet, c.42 by c.64 by c.14.5 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1127754.2).
Attributed works:
32. Stool squab, with embroidery matching Fig.31 mounted on older (original?) velvet, trimmed with two cords on each side. Replaced softwood frame with jute (?) base cloth and presumed twentiethcentury internal upholstery, c.42 by c.64 by c.14.5 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1127754.3).
Attributed works:
33. Stool squab, with embroidery matching Fig.30, otherwise similar to the squab in Fig.32. Replaced softwood frame with jute(?) base cloth and presumed twentieth-century internal upholstery, covered with older (original?) velvet, c.42 by c.64 by c.14.5 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1127754.4).
Attributed works:
34. Stool squab, with embroidery matching Figs.31 and 32; with the original beech frame and linen or hemp base cloth as in Figs.30–31, and older (original?) velvet and trimming as in Figs.32–33, c.42 by c.64 by c.14.5 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1127754.5).
Attributed works:
35. One of the original squabs, beech with linen or hemp base cloth, now divorced from its stool-frame. Re-covered in modern velvet, with embroidery possibly reclaimed from the rescued hangings after the bed’s demolition, 42 by 64 by 14.5 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1129636).
Attributed works:
36. Detail of Fig.35, showing copper thread where the gilding has been lost.
Attributed works:
37. The underside of the squab in Fig.30, showing the later velvet nailed to the original beech frame and linen or hemp base cloth. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire).
Attributed works:
38. The underside of the squab in Fig.33, showing the softwood frame and jute base cloth, and the extensions to the embroidered section of the older velvet, lined with glazed cotton(?). (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire).
Attributed works:
39. Elements of the crimson velvet bed, mounted and framed in the twentieth century, before 1956. Frame 94 by 103 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1129566).
Attributed works:
4. A state bed made for Nils Bielke, Swedish ambassador to Louis XIV. French, c.1682. Velvet hangings with applied silk embroidery, on a wooden frame, 375 by 205 by 155 cm. This is a lit à la duchesse (a form without foot posts), but is shown here with the single pair of curtains arranged around the foot corners, separated from the cantoons at the head end. (Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, NMK 1/1914).
Attributed works:
40. Six motifs of metal-thread embroidery on a vellum backing, outlined in a red silk twist thread; probably from the crimson velvet bed. Length of putto (wing tip to toe) 24.5 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1129667.9–14).
Attributed works:
5. Detail of the bed in Fig.4, showing the counterpane.
Attributed works:
6. Detail of the embroidered velvet hangings of the bed in Fig.1, showing part of a narrow and a broad border, almost certainly repositioned. See also Figs.24 and 25. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1129667.4)
Attributed works:
8. Detail of a map of the parish of St James’s, Westminster, by Richard Bloome, showing Berkeley House, Piccadilly (‘Portugal Street’). c.1685– 89. (British Library, London; Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
9. Three bed feet made for the bed shown in Fig.1 (the one on the right is from the head end, the others are from the foot end), attributed to Thomas Roberts. c.1697–1702. Walnut, height of each 19 cm. (National Trust, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, NT 1129346.1-3).
Western art unattributed:
7. Devonshire House (formerly Berkeley House), Piccadilly, London, drawn shortly before 1733, showing the Duke of Devonshire’s improvements of 1696–97. Watercolour on paper, 17.1 by 25.1 cm. (British Museum, London).
Book Review
Tudor Textiles
03/2021 | 1416 | 163
Pages: 294-295
related names
Reviewer:
Hayward, Maria (Hayward, Maria)
Subjects
Reviewed Items
subjects:
Tudor Textiles By Eleri Lynn. 208 pp. incl. 132 col. ills. (Yale University Press, New Haven and London, in association with Historic Royal Palaces, London, 2020), £35. ISBN 978–0–300–24412–0. | :
Illustrations
Western art unattributed:
3. Detail of the Stonyhurst chasuble. 15th century, much altered. Cloth of gold and red silk damask velvet. (© Stonyhurst College; courtesy Historic Royal Palaces).
Exhibition Review
A Taste for the Exotic: European Silks of the Eighteenth Century. Abegg-Stiftung, Riggisberg
11/2018 | 1388 | 160
Pages: 960-962
related names
Reviewer:
Browne, Clare (Browne, Clare)
Subjects
art literature:
artists:
dates:
media:
museums and institutions:
Illustrations
Western art unattributed:
13. Woven silk, France or Italy. 1700–10, 259 by 226 cm. (Abegg-Stiftung, Riggisberg).
Western art unattributed:
14. Woven silk, France or Italy. 1725–30, 99 by 77.5 cm. (Abegg-Stiftung, Riggisberg).
Western art unattributed:
15. Woven silk, Amsterdam. c.1735, 143 by 52 cm. (Abegg-Stiftung, Riggisberg).
Book Review
White Figurated Linen Damask from the 15th to the Beginning of the 19th Century
01/1966 | 754 | 108
Pages: 41
related names
Reviewer:
Burgers, C. A. (Burgers, C. A.)
Subjects
dates:
subjects:
Reviewed Items
subjects:
White Figurated Linen Damask from the 15th to the Beginning of the 19th Century | author: Ysselsteyn, G. T. van
Article
Continental Sources of Early Damask Patterns in Scotland
11/1965 | 752 | 107
Pages: 559-563
related names
Author:
Cavallo, Adolph S. (Cavallo, Adolph S.; Cavallo, Adolpho Salvatore)
Subjects
dates:
places:
subjects:
Illustrations
Western art unattributed:
15. The Annunciation. Linen Damask Napkin. Scottish. Dated 1722. (Private Collection; on Loan to the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland, Edinburgh.)
Western art unattributed:
16. The Annunciation. Linen Damask Napkin. Dutch, Haarlem, First Half Seventeenth Century. (Private Collection, The Netherlands.) Photo Institute of the History of Art, State University, Utrecht.
Western art unattributed:
17. Story of Joseph. Linen Damask Napkin. Dutch, Haarlem, First Half Seventeenth Century. (Private Collection, The Netherlands.) Photo Institute of the History of Art, State University, Utrecht.
Western art unattributed:
18. The Annunciation. Linen Damask Napkin. Dutch, Probably Haarlem, First Half Seventeenth Century. Courtesy of H. Q. Forbes Irvine, Esq., Drum Castle.
Western art unattributed:
19. The Seasons (Spring and Winter). Linen Damask Napkin, Scottish. Dated 1713. Courtesy National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland.
Western art unattributed:
20. The Seasons (Winter, Autumn and Summer). Scottish. Dated 1748 or 1743. Courtesy National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland.
Western art unattributed:
21. The Seasons (Summer and Spring). Linen Damask Napkin. Dutch, Probably Haarlem, First Half Seventeenth Century. (Collection His Majesty the King of Sweden.) Photo Nordiska Museet, Stockholm.
Western art unattributed:
22. The Seasons (Winter and Autumn). Linen Damask Napkin. Dutch, Probably Haarlem, First Half Seventeenth Century. (Collection His Majesty the King of Sweden.) Photo Nordiska Museet, Stockholm.
Article
Sixteenth-Century Silk Damasks: A Spanish Group
05/1939 | 434 | 74
Pages: 222-223+226-228
related names
Author:
Wingfield Digby, George (Wingfield Digby, George; D., G. F. W.; Digby, G. F. Wingfield; Digby, George Wingfield; Digby, G. W.; Digby, G. Wingfield)
Subjects
dates:
places:
subjects:
subjects:
subjects:
Illustrations
Western art unattributed:
Plate I. A-Silk Damask. Spanish; Sixteenth Century. B-Lustre-Ware Plate (Back). Valencia; Second Half of the Fifteenth Century; C-Silk Damask. Spanish; Sixteenth Century; D-Silk Damask. Spanish; Sixteenth Century; E-Silk Damask. Spanish; Sixteenth Century; F-Lustre-ware Tile. Valencia; Late Fifteenth Century (Victoria and Albert Museum). Sixteenth-Century Silk Damasks-A Spanish Group
Western art unattributed:
Plate II. A-Silk Damask. Spanish; End of the Sixteenth Century; B-Silk Damask (Detail of a Chasuble). Spanish; End of the Sixteenth Century. C-Silk Damask. Spanish; Sixteenth Century; D-Carpet (Detail). Spanish; Sixteenth Century; E-Silk Damask (Detail of a Dalmatic). Spanish; Sixteenth Century; F-Satin and Twill Damask. Spanish; Sixteenth Century (Victoria and Albert Museum). Sixteenth-Century Silk Damasks-A Spanish Group