Carpet

On display in:

Red Drawing Room

Order image © All images subject to copyright

manufacturer

Savonnerie manufactory (estab. 1626)

Charles Le Brun (b.1619, d.1690)

Date

1683

Place of production

  • Chaillot, France

Medium

  • wool

Type of object

  • carpets

Accession number

2267

Savonnerie carpet with the head of Apollo, the Sun God, in the central cartouche. He is encircled by a garland of roses, around which are four stylised lyres, associated with Apollo, at each corner. They are made from shells, which act as the sound-chest, while the strings are stretched from quivers full of arrows. The quivers are crowned with garlands of laurel and surrounded by acanthus leaves. In between the lyres are four French royal crowns, mounted with fleur de lis.

The central section is framed by a square acanthus-leaf border, with large-scale scrolled leaves in blue and grey at each side. Above each pair of leaves is a trophy of arms. At the top and bottom of the carpet, the trophy depicts a pair of ram's heads appearing out of the ends of cannon, either side of a central helmet, topped by a mask like an eagle's head. Either side of the central mask is a square-shaped quiver, containing arrows with coloured vanes. There is a floral garland, which continues around the carpet, separating the quivers from the range of weapons above. Spears, beginning above the rams' heads, and garlanded by laurel wreaths, are surmounted by eagles with outspread wings and the Roman motto 'SPQR' for Senatus Populusque Romanus ('The Senate and the People of Rome'), referring to the government of the ancient Roman Republic, and used as an official signature of the government. Other spears and axes, draped with banners, appear either side. At the top of the trophy is a large pair of blue acanthus leaves, either side of the bearded and horned mask of a satyr.

At the sides of the carpet, the trophy takes the form of a pair of wolf's heads, either side of a central helmet, topped by plumes in faded red, blue and white. The closed ends of a pair of cannon, and swords with blue and pink hilts flank the helmet. Above the continuous floral garland, are draped spears, and, in the centre, the satyr mask.

On the right side of the carpet, the original landscape cartouche survives, showing a mountain scene, with a road, trees and a towered building with an arch, in the foreground. It has an acanthus leaf border and protrudes from the right edge. On the left side, the cartouche has been cut away, leaving an indented edge.

The carpet has a black ground, with scrolling acanthus-like foliage in pink, blue and green, in each corner. The whole carpet is edged by a narrow gold egg and dart border.

Commentary

The most important of the royal commissions by Louis XIV from the Savonnerie factory was the weaving of 93 carpets for the Long Gallery of the Louvre from 1665. It was partly the need for large-scale looms and more space for this endeavour that led to the permanent re-siting of the factory at the former soap works at Chaillot, just outside Paris (savon is French for soap, hence the name Savonnerie).

The Long Gallery was not just the Grande Galerie that can be visited at the Louvre today, but extended into the now-vanished Tuileries Palace, and was 425 metres long. The carpets were divided into groups and woven either with landscapes or imitation reliefs, depending if they were even or odd numbered. Their purpose was to reflect the glory of the King, with themes such as Fame, Victory, Hunting and Authority, and the motifs, divided as they are into sections, are thought to have mirrored the ceiling vaults and panels.

There are three Long Gallery carpets at Waddesdon, acquired by Ferdinand and Alice de Rothschild. The Red Drawing Room carpet, dating from 1683 and woven in Lourdet's workshop, was the 20th in the series and the only one of this design, although the head of Apollo, representing the Sun King, and Louis XIV's symbol, appeared on at least 17 other Long Gallery carpets. Ferdinand echoed the head of Apollo on the carpet with the marble medallion of Louis XIV over the door from the Red Drawing Room to the Oval Hall.

The carpet would originally have been longer, with landscapes at both ends. Most Savonneries surviving today have been altered or cut down because of their history and use in the later eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

Physical description

Dimensions (mm) / weight (mg)

7800 x 5540

Heraldry and mottos

SPQR

History

Provenance

  • Commissioned by King Louis XIV of France (b.1638, d.1715) for the Long Gallery of the Louvre; stored at the Garde-Meuble for most of the 18th century; used for the AssemblĂ©e des Notables at the Palace of Versailles in 1787; sent to the Finance Ministry in Paris on 17th October 1796; disappeared from the Mobilier National and 19th century location unknown; acquired by Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild (b.1839, d.1898); inherited by Miss Alice de Rothschild (b.1847, d.1922); inherited by Mr James de Rothschild (b.1878, d.1957); bequeathed to Waddesdon (National Trust) in 1957.

Collection

  • Waddesdon (National Trust)
  • Bequest of James de Rothschild, 1957
Bibliography

Bibliography

  • Pierre Verlet, Anthony Blunt; The Savonnerie: The James A. de Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor; Fribourg; Office du Livre; 1982; pp. 218-222; Cat. no. 3
  • Jane Turner; Dictionary of Art; 34 vols; London; Grove; 1996; vol. 27, p 895
  • Treasures from The National Trust; London; The National Trust; 2007; p. 343
  • Wolf Burchard, Savonnerie Reviewed: Charles Le Brun and the 'Grand Tapis de Pied d'Ouvrage a la Turque' Woven for the Grande Galerie at the Louvre, Furniture History: The Journal of The Furniture History Society, XLVIII, 2012, 1-43; p.35
  • Wolf Burchard, Don't pull the rug from under our feet, Country Life, 2012-19 December 2018, 190-194; p192

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