A FLEMISH MYTHOLOGICAL TAPESTRY FRAGMENT
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A FLEMISH MYTHOLOGICAL TAPESTRY FRAGMENT

LATE 16TH EARLY 17TH CENTURY

Details
A FLEMISH MYTHOLOGICAL TAPESTRY FRAGMENT
Late 16th early 17th Century
Woven in wools and silks, depicting Vertumnus disguised as an old Maiden before Pomona from the Vertumnus and Pomona series and to the foreground an elder speaking to a young maiden, between them a basket of flowers, the background with a garden landscape and a castle, the distance with a wooded mountanous landscape, lacking borders, within a later green outer slip, water damage to lower edge, minor areas of reweaving
8ft. 9in. (266cm.) high x 6ft. 3½in. (192cm.) wide
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis. This lot, if not cleared by 1pm on the next business day following the sale will be removed to the warehouse of: Cadogan Tate Ltd., Fine Art Services Cadogan House, 2 Relay Road, London W12 7SJ. Tel: 44(0)20 8735 3700. Fax: 44(0)20 8735 3701. Lots will be available for collection following transfer to Cadogan Tate, every week-day from 9am to 5pm. An initial transfer and administration charge of £3.20 (Paintings) or £18.50 (Furniture/Objects) and a storage charge of £1.60 (Paintings) or £ 3.20 (Furniture/Objects) per lot per day will be payable to Cadogan Tate. These charges are subject to VAT and an insurance surcharge. Exceptionally large pictures will be subject to a surcharge.

Lot Essay

Vertumnus and Pomona are two Italian gods, divinities of seasons, changes and ripening of plant life, whose story is told in Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book XIV, Verses 623 - 771. Vertumnus in an attempt to gain favour of the nymph Pomona tried to approach her in many different disguises, but only succeeded when he appeared as an old woman. He pleaded for his own cause but was again rejected. As last attempt he revealed himself in his true shape as a resplendent youthful god and was finally able to conquer Pomona's heart.

History of the Series

The original and extremely popular series illustraiting the story of Vertumnus and Pomona, consisting of nine subjects, were almost certainly designed by Jan Conelisz Vermeyen (1500 - 1559) in circa 1545 while the borders were by Cornelis Bos.
The offered tapestry is a later version and was woven to an altered design in the late 16th or early 17th Century. Interestingly various series that had been designed in the mid-16th Century were put back on the looms around 1700, a time of relative artistic anaemia. Martin Reymbouts (active circa 1570-1619), for example, is recorded having woven such repetitions, including re-edited versions of the Vertumnus and Pomona set. There is another example of such a re-edited version by Jacques I Geubels (active circa 1585-1605) or his widow Catherina van den Eynde (d. 1620s) in Detroit (G.Delmarcel, Flemish Tapestry, Tielt, 1999, pp.305 and 365). Another later version that is in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts (C.Adelson, European Tapestry in the Minneapolis Insitute of Arts, Minneapolis, 1994, cat. 14, pp.148) depicts Offerings the the Goddess Ceres and is attributed to a set that is entitle The Garden of Pomona. Four further panels from that set survive (two in the Galleria de Palazzo Bianco, Genova, one in the ING Bank, Brussels, and another in a private collection in Italy), but it appears that the tapestry offered here could not have belonged to the same series. The title as well as surviving examples of the former set imply that the gods do not play an active part in the subjects while both Vertumnus and Pomona are the focal point of this tapestry (Adelson, op. cit., pp. 150-151)

Related Tapestries

Three sets of the original series after Vermeyen remain in the Spanish Royal Collection, the oldest by Joris Wezeleer was woven for Charles V (d. 1556), while the other are by arguably the best weaver of his time, Willem de Pannemaker (d. 1581) and woven for Philip II (d. 1598) (P.Junquera de Vega and C. Herrero Carretero, Catalogo de Tapices del Patrimonio Nacional, Madrid, 1986, vol.I, cats. 18 and 16 - 17, pp. 123 - 133 and 105 - 122, respectively). Another set, woven concurrently with the first and also for Charles V, is today in Vienna (L. Baldass, Die Wiener Gobelinssammlung, Vienna, 1920, cats. 146 - 154).

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