Over the course of her lifetime, Lady Helen Hamlyn, the 88-year-old widow of the late publishing magnate Paul Hamlyn, has amassed one of the world's most impressive collections of rare textiles. Last year she decided to sell a slim selection of her hoard at Bonhams, including a mythic Flemish tapestry, of Rothschild family provenance, that was woven sometime in the early 16th century. When the gavel came down, the piece had fetched more than $330,000, roughly double the estimate.
Tapestries, it turns out, are enjoying a 21st-century renaissance. Even if the market remains decidedly niche, recent auction sales demonstrate an intense desire on the part of a competitive, upper-crust collector pool seeking a tangible distinction from the New New Money: cryptocrats and nefarious NFTers.
"We're living in the mega moment," says historian Glenn Adamson. "Not just the megarich, but mega-ambitious domestic architecture. If you've built a 20-foot-high, 50-foot-wide wall, how are you going to make that wall perform? Boy, a 16th-century Flemish tapestry would be hard to beat. There's nothing more mega than a historic tapestry?"
Once used for ceremonial rituals and palace decor, tapestries were the Jeff Koonses of their time, bragging rights that telegraphed gravitas. The most prized examples were highlighted with gold and silver thread, meticulously woven in Flemish and French workshops over months or even years. "They were considered the most valuable thing other than jewelry, gold, and silver," says Frances McCord Krongard, the European art specialist for the Washington, DC, auction house Potomack Company. "Nobles would have them rolled up and travel with them to their military camps and castles. At home they often had guards protecting them.
Denne historien er fra September 2022-utgaven av Town & Country US.
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Denne historien er fra September 2022-utgaven av Town & Country US.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Wake Up and Smell the PALM TREES
In Palm Beach, second homes are the new first homes. For Tommy Hilfiger, Coral House is much more. After 40 years of running a fashion empire, he's shifting gears and staying put for a while.
Bite Me!
Perfumes with sweet notes of vanilla, cocoa, caramel, and honey are a guilt-free indulgence. Join us in the dining room, won't you?
Battle for the Soul of SKIING
Lift lines are interminable and slopes are packed. Meanwhile, wealthy resort owners have been making their mountains semi- or entirely private. Can the original gonzo-glamorous sport survive its new highs and lows?
Kingdom Come
Kelly Reilly has become a sensation for her turn as Yellowstone's Beth Dutton, the deliciously wicked daughter of a Montana cattle baron. Now, as the family saga reaches its dramatic finale, the actress is ready to shed her alter ego. Or is she?
Town? Country? YES.
A new Charleston hotel makes it plain: This place is made for traveling, happily between worlds.
Escape from the WHITE BOX GALLERY
Art collectors, stifle your yawns and
Escape to WHERE TOURMALINES SPEAK LOUDER
Desperate to mute quiet luxury?
Escape WORTH AVENUE
Can't stomach yet another lunch at BiCE?
Escape to THE MIND OF ELSA
Are you over every influencer wearing, the same uninspired trinkets?
Escape to SOMEWHERE OVER THE RAINBOW
Are you ready for lapels featuring something other than political posturing?