Wall Covering with Classical Figure

Cleveland Museum of Art

Wall Covering with Classical Figure

Philippe de Lasalle

Date
late 1700s - early 1800s
Medium
Silk: llampas (satin weave and plain weave variant), brocaded, appliquéd, embroidered
Culture
France, late 18th-early 19th Century
Department
Textiles
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

France developed a thriving silk industry in Lyon with the goal of becoming the fashion center of Europe. Employment soared to some 20,000 workers by the time of the French Revolution in 1789. Designs changed annually, colors established new fashions, and spectacular silks were produced during the late 1700s. Philippe de Lasalle, trained as a painter by François Boucher, became the celebrated chief textile designer for Camille Pernon & Cie, purveyors to King Louis XVI (reigned 1785-90). Lasalle’s floral style with large and balanced designs, enhanced here with a fashionable classical figure, displays his preference for lighter forms without the opulent gold thread of earlier brocaded silks.

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