
Minneapolis Institute of Art
The Philosophers
Designer: Central design and cartoon by a painter active in France, about 1610-1617; Designer: Border design and cartoon probably by Guillaume Dumée; Designer: and Laurent Guyot; Weaver: Faubourg Saint-Marcel manufactory of Marc de Comans and François de la Planche
- Date
- c. 1611–27
- Medium
- Wool, silk, tapestry weave
- Department
- European Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
This tapestry depicting philosophers gathered in a refined court is part of a series that tells the ancient story of Artemesia, queen of Caria (southwest region of modern-day Turkey). She was exceptional for ruling without a husband when many believed only kings should rule. This is one of eight tapestries devoted to the widowed queen’s cultured and stable reign. Though the tapestries were woven in 1600s France, their designs were informed by a collection of illustrated sonnets composed in 1562. These were commissioned by the widowed French queen Catherine de Medici (1519–1589), who looked to Artemesia as an example of powerful and just female leadership. Europe
The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.

The Education of the Young King
Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Queen Distributing the Booty
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Soldiers With Vases and a Litter
Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Gifts
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Exercise in the Assault and Defense of a Bastion
Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Queen’s Entry into the Harbor of Rhodes
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Acis and Galatea Listening to the Song of Polyphemus
Rijksmuseum

The Coronation Sacrifice
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Esther and Ahasuerus
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Venus tells Aeneas and his friend Achates to go to Carthage
Cleveland Museum of Art

Tapestry: Psyche at the Basketmakers
Getty Museum

One of the Three Magi on a Millefleurs Ground
Minneapolis Institute of Art