A PAIR OF FRENCH TAPESTRY OVERDOOR PANELS
PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE COLLECTOR (LOT 207)
A PAIR OF FRENCH TAPESTRY OVERDOOR PANELS

LATE 18TH FIRST HALF 19TH CENTURY, PROBABLY GOBELINS, VARIATIONS IN SIZE

Details
A PAIR OF FRENCH TAPESTRY OVERDOOR PANELS
LATE 18TH FIRST HALF 19TH CENTURY, PROBABLY GOBELINS, VARIATIONS IN SIZE
Each with a central medallion with mythological events flanked by reclining sphinxes and putti holding floral garlands, within a laurel border, with turned-over blue outer slip, variations in size, areas of losses
One 40 in. (102 cm.) high, 73½ in. (186 cm.) wide
The other 38 in. (97 cm.) high, 71 in. (180 cm.) wide (2)
Provenance
Alice Tully, sold Christie's, New York, 26 - 28 October 1994, lot 14.

Lot Essay

Miss Alice Tully was the daughter of a Republican state senator and grand-daughter of Amory Houghton, the founder of Corning Glass. One of the greatest patrons of music and musicians of this century, she entirely financed anonymously a concert series, the Musica Aeterna, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, while the most important and visible memorial to her charity is the Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center.

Sarah Kelly, the interior designer whom Alice Tully met in France before the war, guided the building of her remarkable collection of pictures, drawings, sculpture and decorative arts that were to fill the five apartments that made up the entire 27th floor of Hampshire House, which became her home until her death in 1993.

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