Periods and centres of activity

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://www.britannica.com/art/tapestry
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

External Websites
Britannica Websites
Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students.

Ancient Western world

Examples of tapestry weaving from the ancient world are so isolated and fragmentary as to make it uncertain either when or where the art originated. The earliest known tapestry weaving was done in linen by the ancient Egyptians between 1483 and 1411 bce. Preserved by the dry desert climate of Egypt, three tapestry fragments were found in the tomb of Thutmose IV. Two of the fragments have cartouches of Egyptian pharaohs, and the third is a series of hieroglyphs. In the tomb of Tutankhamen (c. 1323 bce), a robe and glove woven by the tapestry technique have also been found.

Although no examples remain, writers of antiquity are unanimous in proclaiming the magnificence of Babylonian and Assyrian tapestries. Some scholars have speculated that the ancient Egyptians learned the art of tapestry from the ancient peoples of Mesopotamia. During that period when the few preserved Egyptian tapestry fragments were made, Mesopotamian ideas, techniques, and, perhaps, craftsmen were entering Egypt. These scholars conjecture that, since tapestry weaving did not occur in quantity again in Egypt until the 4th century ce, it is likely that the craft was not indigenous.

Tapestry weaving continued to flourish in western Asia in the 1st millennium bce. Fragments of wool tapestries dating from the 4th or 3rd century bce have been found in graves in Ukraine near Kerch in the Crimean peninsula. The ornamental motifs of these fragments are of a widely diffused Hellenistic style that was especially prevalent in Syrian art at the time. Another fragment showing close Syrian connections is a piece of silk tapestry dating about 200 to 500 years later and found in China at Loulan in the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang. Other fragments have been found in Syria at the archaeological sites of Palmyra and Doura-Europus. If climatic conditions for textile preservation in the Middle East had been more favourable, it might be possible to theorize that Syria was a great centre of tapestry weaving, especially at the start of the Christian Era.

There are literary descriptions of the making of tapestry in ancient Greece and Rome. In the Odyssey, Homer (8th century bce?) describes Penelope working on a tapestry that was unraveled each night as she waited for Odysseus. The Roman poet Ovid (43 bce–17 ce) in the Metamorphoses describes the tapestry looms used by Minerva and Arachne in their mythological weaving contest. During the period of the empire the Romans apparently imported a considerable number of the tapestries used in their public buildings as well as in the homes of the wealthy. Since the Latin terms referring to tapestry and weaving are Greek in origin, it is generally supposed that the art of tapestry making was taught to the Romans by the Greeks.

Eastern Asia

Called kesi (cut silk), tapestry has long been produced in China, traditionally being made entirely of silk; Chinese tapestries are extremely fine in texture and light in weight. The weave is finished perfectly on both sides so that the tapestries are reversible. The warps are vertical in relation to the pattern, rather than horizontal as in European weaving. Sometimes the weaver uses metal threads to make his hangings more sumptuous or highlights the design by painting, although this is not considered a commendable expedient.

Many kesi, such as Dongfang Shuo Stealing the Peaches of Longevity, imitated paintings and were mounted on scrolls or album leaves in the same manner as the pictures they copied. Tapestries to cover large wall surfaces, such as the kesi (7 feet 3 inches by 5 feet 9 inches; 2.2 by 1.75 metres) of Fenghuang in a Rock Garden (late Ming period), were usually brighter in colour, heavier in texture, and frequently woven with metal threads. Tapestry was also used to decorate furniture and clothing.

The earliest surviving examples of kesi date from the Tang dynasty (618–907 ce). Eighth-century remains have been found in desert oases around Turfan in the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, China, and late Tang fragments have been found in the Mogao Caves near the town of Dunhuang in Gansu province. It is thought that these weavings are probably not representative of the more fully developed kesi of the Tang period because they show only simple repeating patterns of flowers, vines, ducks, lions, etc., and were found in relatively remote areas of Central Asia along the silk-trade route. In comparison is the more sophisticated 8th-century kesi that hangs in the Taima-dera, a temple near Nara, Japan. Based on the story of the Tang dynasty priest Shandao, this 43-square-foot (4-square-metre) weaving is the oldest known complete Chinese wall tapestry.

During the Song dynasty (960–1279) the imperial family encouraged painting and patronized the art of tapestry. An important weaving centre was at Dingzhou in Hebei province. Under the Yuan dynasty (1206–1368) a government factory for weaving kesi was established at Hangzhou in Zhejiang province. Characterized by their rich ornamental designs, the Hangzhou kesi were frequently woven with gold and silver thread. Examples of tapestry from the Ming period (1368–1644) are rare and exquisite. The kesi executed during the rule of the great Manchu emperor Kangxi (also called Xuanye; 1661–1722) are the finest tapestries produced during the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12). They are distinguished for their delicate colouring and the use of philosophical and religious themes. Later Qing kesi have survived in great abundance and show a decided artistic and technical decline. This is especially evident in the frequent use of painting to perfect design details in 19th-century kesi.

The tapestry technique traveled from China to Japan in the late 15th or early 16th century during the Muromachi (Ashikaga) period (1338–1573). Japanese tapestry called tsuzure-nishiki (polychrome tapestry) differs from the Chinese kesi in its more pronounced surface relief. This is achieved through the use of thick cotton weft threads covered with silk, gold, or silver thread.

Paralleling the great period of sumptuous brocade manufacturing, the production of tsuzure flourished during the Tokugawa (Edo) period (1603–1867), especially in the early 17th century and throughout the entire 18th century. These polychrome tapestries were primarily used to decorate garments and for wrapping gifts; on rare occasions they were also used as wall hangings. Although the tapestry industry declined in quality in the 19th century, it was revitalized in the 20th century. Monumental wall hangings and theatre curtains are woven in the textile factories of Ōsaka and Kyōto by both traditional Japanese and European tapestry techniques.

The history of the art in Korea remains obscure. Rather coarse wool tapestry-woven rugs with stylized motifs, however, are still produced there.