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Lace panel

Unknown

The Victoria and Albert Museum

The Victoria and Albert Museum
London, United Kingdom

Object Type
Lace-making developed in England during the 16th century in response to the growth in personal wealth and to changes in fashionable dress. Needle lace, still then seen as a branch of embroidery, was made in professional workshops in London. But through the teaching of embroidery as a domestic skill with needle lace stitches in the repertoire, lace was also made at home, for the decoration of household linen, clothing and other objects. This piece appears to have been made without a practical purpose, but as a demonstration of the embroiderer's skill.

Design & Designing
The most popular subjects for the needlework pictures and panels to which this lace is related, were scenes from the Old Testament of the Bible and classical mythology. This piece includes various motifs which the maker, who has signed herself B.E.B., would have found in pattern books and which could have also been used for embroidery, particularly the animals, birds and flowers around the border.

Subject Depicted
This panel shows Adam and Eve being tempted by the serpent in the Garden of Eden. In the Judeo-Christian and Islamic traditions, they are the original human couple, parents of the human race. The inscription refers to their fall from grace after eating the forbidden fruit of the tree of knowledge.

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  • Title: Lace panel
  • Creator: Unknown
  • Date Created: 1600/1650
  • Location: England
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 24.1 cm, Width: 23.5 cm
  • Provenance: Given by Sydney Vacher
  • Medium: Needle lace, with details in metal thread
The Victoria and Albert Museum

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