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This book is the first sustained scholastic treatment of the Life of Christ tapestries, which were commissioned by Pope Urban VIII's nephew, Cardinal Francesco Barberini. Covering over 2800 square feet, the series is one of the grandest monuments of seventeenth century Rome. A close reading of each panel sets the tapestries into a number of overlapping contexts; they indicate the stylistic advances of the high Baroque period, as well the political and social agendas of their patrons. The introductory chapter lays out the context of Urban VIII's Rome. Subsequent chapters reconstruct the history of Cardinal Barberini's private tapestry commissions, and the activity of Giovanni Francesco Romanelli, the supervising designer of the Life of Christ. The contemporary usage and display of the tapestries is discussed, as is the transfer of the series to the United States and its subsequent display in New York's Cathedral of St. John the Divine. The final chapter is dedicated to technical aspects of the panels, recounting their recent conservation.
Applied arts. Arts and crafts --- tapestries --- Barberini (familie) --- Cortona, da, Pietro --- Rubens, Peter Paul --- Romanelli, Giovanni Francesco --- anno 1600-1699 --- Rome --- Tapestry, Baroque --- Tapestry --- Fiber sculpture --- Tapestries --- Decorative arts --- Interior decoration --- Needlework --- Textile fabrics --- Wall hangings --- Baroque tapestry --- Conservation and restoration --- Urban --- Romanelli, Giovanni Francesco, --- Romanelli, Giovan Francesco, --- Romanellus, Jean François, --- Urbanus --- Urbain --- Barberini, Maffeo Vincenzo, --- Barberino, Maffeo, --- Urbano --- Exhibitions
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