Returned to lender The Met accepts temporary loans of art both for short-term exhibitions and for long-term display in its galleries.
Palampore
India (Coromandel Coast), for the European market
Not on view
This pristine Indian palampore may have been a wedding gift for the wealthy Albany merchant Philip Van Rensselaer (1747–1798) and Maria Sanders (1749–1830) when they married in 1768. The palampore’s imagery seems to present a nuptial theme—all of the animals and even the human figures are paired off two by two. Likely intended for the Dutch market, it probably came to heavily Dutch-populated Albany via Amsterdam. The two unusual toothy crowned lions at bottom right have been copied from the pair of smiling lions found on the silver ducaton coin minted in the Netherlands for use by the Dutch East India Company in Asia.
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