“Paul and Virginie” Furnishing Fabric

Description

The late 18th and early 19th centuries were an incredibly fertile period for innovation in the European textile industries, especially in the field of direct printing. Decades of experimentation led to the development of a variety of ways to apply color and pattern to cloth, which enabled artists and designers to invent new design vocabularies and quickly respond to cultural trends and ideas. One of the most enduring of these innovations was the ability to print on cloth with copperplates and then subsequently with engraved copper metal rollers. The quality of detail achieved through this method was unrivaled in terms of clarity, precision.

Provenance

Cora Ginsburg LLC, New York, purchased at/from Fourney, 1994 [according to email from T. Halle to M. Watt on Apr. 1, 2020; copy in curatorial object file]; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2020.

“Paul and Virginie” Furnishing Fabric

Bernardin de Saint-Pierre

c. 1800-10

Accession Number

256792

Medium

Cotton; roller printed

Dimensions

201.9 × 119.7 cm (79 1/2 × 47 1/8 in.)

Classification

weaving - printed

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Elizabeth M. Schultz Endowment Fund