VIENNA.- Embellishing rooms with textiles dates back to the earliest civilisations. In the Middle Ages precious textiles were most of all the prerogative of the nobility, reflecting a princes prestige and authority. Tapestries were much sought-after. Their extremely time-consuming production using costly materials such as gold- and sliver threads, silk and wool proclaimed their luxurious character.
The subject matters depicted on these tapestries reflected the fact that this narrative medium functioned both as political propaganda and a document to its owners connoisseurship and exalted rank. Scenes from court life vied with historical events, mythological subjects and classical stories; also popular were episodes from the Old or the New Testament, and scenes from the lives of the saints. Regardless of a tapestrys subject matter, some of these almost life-size figures sporting contemporary fashions functioned as identification figures. They represented the elite world to which the owner of the tapestries also belonged. For us today, these monumental wall hangings serve as important documents of courtly life and its chivalrous ideals.
The exhibition offers a survey of the
Kunsthistorisches Museums rich holdings of tapestries that cannot be on permanent display for conservation reasons. A selection of fourteen masterpieces presents the art of the tapestry in the 16th century. Brussels evolved into a leading centre of tapestry production. Celebrated artists such as Barend van Orley, Pieter Coecke van Aelst, Michiel Coxie and Jan Cornelisz Vermeyes produced designs for these monumental wall hangings. Their buyers came from the small elite circle able to afford such costly artefacts, among them members of the house of Habsburg. Emperor Charles V (1500-1556) was renowned for his lavish commissions of tapestries, setting a high benchmark for the other European courts and documenting the former status of tapestries, which were once regarded as far more valuable than paintings.
With the help of contemporary works by Margret Eicher and Nives Widauer the exhibition draws a line from the Renaissance to the present day, imbuing tapestries once more with some of their former meaning.