A FRENCH HISTORICAL TAPESTRY
PROPERTY FROM AN AMERICAN COLLECTOR (LOTS 239-268)
A FRENCH HISTORICAL TAPESTRY

BEAUVAIS, BY PHILIPPE BEHAGLE, LATE 17TH EARLY 18TH CENTURY

Details
A FRENCH HISTORICAL TAPESTRY
BEAUVAIS, BY PHILIPPE BEHAGLE, LATE 17TH EARLY 18TH CENTURY
Woven in wools and silks, depicting a scene from les petits chasses with a king and queen beneath a parasol headed by two musicians and with various figures within a wooded landscape with vistas of hilly landscapes beyond, within a simulated frame border with clasps and fan motifs in clasps to the angles, the brown outer slip folded over to each side and lacking at top and bottom, the main field to the top folded over by 12½ in. (32 cm.), limited areas of re-weaving
8 ft. 7 in. (262 cm.) high, excluding folded-over section, 15 ft. 9 in. (481 cm.) long

Lot Essay

This tapestry relates to a small group of tapestries that were woven by the Royal Beauvais workshop under the directorship of Philippe Behagle (1641-1705) in the late 17th century. The first apparent mention of the series is in the 1697 addition to the inventory of Louis XIV where four pieces of 'Petites Chasses et Verdures' are described as 'fabrique de Beauvais, manufacture de Béagle, représentant des paysages'. Unfortunately the records for the Beauvais manufactory for those years are lost and exact details concerning their original commission and weaving remain unclear. Although this series probably formed part of the most frequently woven subject by the atelier, along with verdures and Teniers scenes, very few have survived today. Two signed examples are in the Monuments Historiques, Paris (R.-A. Weigert, 'Les Commencements de la Manufacture Royale de Beauvais', Gazette des Beaux-Arts, December 1964, p. 338), a signed Chasse is in the Hermitage, Saint Petersburg (N. Biriukova, Les Tapisseries françaises de la Fin du XVe au XXe Siècle dans les Collections de l'Ermitage, Leningrad, 1974, cat. 54, p. 54) and a Hawking tapestry in the collection of M. Fenaille (J. Badin, La Manufacture de Tapisseries de Beauvaise, Paris, 1909, facing page X of the introduction). Interestingly a tapestry of identical subject to that offered was sold anonymously, Sotheby Parke Bernet, 10 and 11 November 1972, lot 266. The borders of this tapestry are very typical for the atelier and can be found on contemporary sets such as the Menageries, the Metamorphoses and the Ports de Mer such as that sold anonymously, Sotheby's, Monaco, 22 June 1987, lot 1180.

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