Broderie- textes-représentation-archéologie

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yrwanel
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Message09 Mars 2012, 19:15


yrwanel
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Message01 Déc 2012, 22:52

Opus anglicanum sur velours de soie. XVème

Image

Date:
late 15th century
Culture:
English
Medium:
Silk and metallic threads on linen; appliqué on silk velvet foundation with silk embroidery and silver-gilt shot

This fragment of "opus anglicanum" ("English work," as it was called in medieval inventories) is remarkable for the richness of its design and its superb state of preservation. The decoration consists of two cherubim, each atop a wheel from which rays of light emanate; four fleurs-de-lis; and four thistles in three different designs, each motif distributed along a vertical axis. These elements, all embroidered in vibrantly colored silk and silver-gilt threads, are appliquéd onto the red velvet foundation, on which the scrolls and other designs—accented with attached minute silver-gilt rings or shot—are embroidered directly. The lay of the velvet, the vertical warp and design, and the outline of the fragment indicate that it formed the lower-right quadrant of a chasuble, worn by a priest during the celebration of Mass.

Please note that this object is seen on a rotating basis, due to conservation requirements.

http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/se ... vet&pos=30

yrwanel
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Message01 Déc 2012, 23:07

Chasuble, XVème:

Broderie + appliqué: travail "provincial", Germanie

Image

Date:
15th century
Geography:
Made in, Lower Saxony, Germany
Culture:
German
Medium:
Silk, parchment and linen on wool

A chasuble is worn by a priest during the celebration of the Mass. On the back, which would have been visible as he faced the altar, are the Crucifixion of Jesus, with the Virgin Mary, his mother, and Saint John the Evangelist. Jesus' outpouring of blood is dramatized by the use of embroidery. The spear and sponge by which he was tormented, and the scourges from his Flagellation on the front add to the theme of sacrifice. This simple and provincial vestment is unusual for its use of applied leather and of plain wool rather than cut velvet.

yrwanel
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Message06 Déc 2012, 18:26

Couverture de livre: XVième restaurée au XIXème

Image

"The earliest example of an embroidered book in existence is, I believe, the manuscript English Psalter written in the thirteenth century, which afterwards belonged to Anne, daughter of Sir Simon de Felbrigge, K. G., standard-bearer to Richard ii. Anne de Felbrigge was a nun in the convent of Minoresses at Bruisyard in Suffolk, during the latter half of the fourteenth century, and it is quite likely that she herself worked the cover—such work having probably been largely done in monasteries and convents during the middle ages. "On the upper side is a very charming design of the Annunciation, and, on the under, another of the Crucifixion, each measuring 7¾ by 5¾ inches. In both cases the ground is worked with fine gold threads 'couched' in a zigzag pattern, the rest of the work being very finely executed in split-stitch by the use of which apparently continuous lines can be made, each successive stitch beginning a little within that immediately preceding it—the effect in some places being that of a very fine chain-stitch. The lines of this work do not in any way follow the meshes of the linen or canvas, as is mostly the case with book-work upon such material, but they curve freely according to the lines and folds of the design."
Date Image published 1899. Embroidery is a Victorian "restoration" of 16th century original ♥


Egyptian textile museum

yrwanel
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Message06 Déc 2012, 18:29

broderie sur velours/ XIVème - VAM

Cope, 1330-1350, V&A Museum

Techniques - Silk velvet, embroidered with silver and silver-gilt thread and coloured silks

Place -England (embroidering), Italy (velvet, probably weaving)

Dimensions - Width 165.5 cm (along top), Circumference 341 cm ♥




Image

yrwanel
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Message06 Déc 2012, 18:36

Broderie XVIème

The Holy Family
Date: 16th century
Culture: Italian
Medium: Silk and metal-wrapped thread on silk
Dimensions: Overall: 4 1/4 x 4 3/8 in. (10.8 x 11.1 cm) Classification: Textiles ♥

MET MUSEUM

Image

yrwanel
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Message06 Déc 2012, 18:39

Pas d'ici, mais trop beau....

Circular piece of silk with Mongol images, Iran or Iraq, early 14th century. Silk, cotton and gold. Original size: diam. 69 cm. Davids Samling, Copenhagen

Image

yrwanel
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Message10 Déc 2012, 21:50

Lien sur le VAM (Victoria et Albert Museum) sur la broderie au MA en Grande-Bretagne, une synthèse, certes, mais qui a le mérite d'exister.

http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/g ... mbroidery/

yrwanel
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Message10 Déc 2012, 22:03


yrwanel
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Message10 Déc 2012, 22:20

Même si vous avez quelques soucis avec l'anglais, il y a des dates ET de superbes photos de pièces archéologiques

http://www.janezimmerman.com/Temp/Needl ... dieval.pdf

yrwanel
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Message10 Déc 2012, 22:34

Un peu d'exotisme: les broderies persanes: http://www.scapersianu.com/Class%20Note ... oidery.pdf

yrwanel
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Message10 Déc 2012, 22:37

http://www.english.cam.ac.uk/medieval/z ... php?id=123

opus anglicanum XIIIème.
Cliquez sur l'image: il y a un super zoom permettant de déguster les détails de cet ouvrage


PS: explorez le site: il y a quelques manuscrits pas tristes.... :mrgreen:

yrwanel
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Message10 Déc 2012, 22:41

Les reliures des livres étaient AUSSI brodées...

http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewc ... xt=tsaconf

yrwanel
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Message11 Déc 2012, 13:01

Near and Middle Eastern Textiles
A Few Fragments
from the 9th to the 14th centuries

http://home.earthlink.net/~lilinah/Text ... tiles.html

yrwanel
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Message13 Déc 2012, 00:26

Image

Embroidered silk purse (Fatamidic? 11th c.) in the Treasury of the Basilica of Saint Servatius, Maastricht ♥

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