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Books  >  Scholarly Publications and Exhibition Catalogues  >  Books on Medieval Art, Arms and Armor  
The Unicorn Tapestries in The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Unicorn Tapestries in The Metropolitan Museum of Art
ENLARGE

By Adolfo Salvatore Cavallo, 1998

A new look at the Unicorn Tapestries, giving the reader a close-up look at the tapestries' physical nature and construction as well as their historical and cultural context. Each tapestry is reproduced in large colorplates and a wealth of color details.

128 pages, 91 illustrations (77 in full color), 9 in. x 12 in. Paper.

The Unicorn Tapestries, Paper
04-002325
Member Price: $22.45 each
Non-Member Price: $24.95 each


Quantity:



The Unicorn Tapestries
South Netherlandish
Wool warp, wool, silk, silver, and gilt wefts
Gift of John D. Rockefeller Jr., 1937 (37.80.6)

The seven individual hangings, known as The Unicorn Tapestries, are among the most beautiful and complex works of art from the late Middle Ages that survive. Luxuriously woven in fine wool and silk with silver and gilded threads, the tapestries vividly depict scenes associated with a hunt for the elusive, magical unicorn. The Unicorn in Captivity may have been created as a single image rather than part of a series. In this instance, the unicorn likely represents the beloved tamed. As such his is tethered to a tree and constrained by a fence, but the chain is not secure and the fence is low enough to leap over, so the unicorn could escape if he wished. His confinement is a happy one, to which the ripe seed-laden pomegranates in the tree—a medieval symbol of fertility and marriage—testify. The red stains on his flank do not appear to be blood, as there are no visible wounds similar to those in the hunting series; rather, they represent juice dripping from bursting pomegranates above. Many of the other plants represented here, such as wild orchid, bistort, and thistle, echo this theme of marriage and procreation; they were acclaimed in the Middle Ages as fertility aids for both men and women. Even the little frog, nestled among the violets at the lower right, was cited by medieval writers for its noisy mating.


Unknown Artist: The Unicorn in Captivity Poster
Medieval Tapestries in The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Cloisters: Medieval Art and Architecture
Met Bestseller - Unknown Artist: The Unicorn in Captivity Poster
02-028603
Member Price: $19.75
Non-Member Price: $21.95
Medieval Tapestries in The Metropolitan Museum of Art
05-005863
Member Price: $85.50
Non-Member Price: $95.00
Met Bestseller - The Cloisters: Medieval Art and Architecture
Member Prices: $17.95–$26.95
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