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Photo Credit: © Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, Washington, D.C. Photography by Neil Greentree.

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Legend of the Cross


German, Late Gothic
ca. 1460 - 1500
91.44 cm x 167.64 cm x 1 cm (36 in. x 66 in. x 3/8 in.)
wool on linen
HC.T.1915.01.(T)

On view


Permalink: http://museum.doaks.org/objects-1/info/101341

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Description
The scenes of this tapestry are most likely taken from The Golden Legend by Jacobus de Voragine, a thirteenth-century compilation of legends about saints and events. The two legends relevant to the tapestry are no. 68, “The Finding of the Holy Cross,” which took place in Jerusalem in the fourth century when Saint Helena, the emperor Constantine’s mother, located and uncovered the true cross, the authenticity of which immediately was proven by the resurrection of a corpse, and no. 137, “The Exaltation of the Holy Cross,” which took place in the seventh century when the emperor Heraclius, having won the cross back from the Persians who had stolen it, returned it to Jerusalem.

According to the Golden Legend, when Heraclius brought the cross back from Jerusalem, he came down from the Mount of Olives dressed in his imperial court dress, intending to enter Jerusalem by the gate through which Christ had carried the cross as he entered the city on the day of his crucifixion. To the astonishment of Heraclius and the onlookers, the gate suddenly turned into a solid stone wall before Heraclius could pass through. As this happened, an angel appeared and proclaimed that when Christ had entered through that gate there had been no pageantry or pomp and that he had ridden on a lowly donkey, offering an example of humility to his followers. Heraclius immediately dismounted, shed his royal regalia, took the cross in his hands, and carried it into the city.

The shape and size of the tapestry suggests that it originally served as an altar frontal or antependium, and the subject matter would suggest that it might have been brought out for use during Holy Week. Curiously, the tapestry is sewn together from two separately woven pieces of different loom widths, both complete and seemingly always having been associated as they now are.

J. Carder


Bibliography
Catalogue of the Mary Blair Collection of Mediaeval and Renaissance Art. 1914. Chicago: publisher not identified.

Wolff, Kurt Verlag. Die Frankische Bildwirkerei. Munich: 1926, pl. 48.

Die Frankische Bildteppiche, no. 48, pl. 75.

Kurth, Betty. Die Deutsche Bildteppiche des Mittelalters 1. Vienna, 1926, 270 and vol. 2, pl. 300.

Goebel, Heinrich. Wandteppiche 3, pt 1. Berlin, 1933, 168.

Bühl, Gudrun, editor. Dumbarton Oaks, The Collections. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection (distributed by Harvard University Press), 2008, 310f, ill.



Exhibition History
William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art [now The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art], Kansas City, MO, March 13, 1942 - October 18, 1944. (protective measure during World War II)

National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, for display with the Gallery's collections, October 1987 - April 1989. (protective measure during construction)


Acquisition History
Collection of Mrs. Mary Anne Italia Mitchell Blair (1855-1940), Chicago, by 1914;[1]

Purchased from the dealer Arden Studios, Inc., New York, NY, by Anna Dorinda Blakesley Barnes Bliss (1851-1935), March 22, 1915 - 1935;[2]

By descent to her daughter and son-in-law, Mildred Barnes and Robert Woods Bliss, Washington, DC, 1935;

Collection of Mildred Barnes and Robert Woods Bliss, 1935 - November 29, 1940;

Gifted to Harvard University, November 29, 1940;

Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, House Collection, Washington, DC.


Notes:
[1] See Catalogue of the Mary Blair Collection of Medieval and Renaissance Art, Chicago, 1914. n. 69.
[2] Receipt in object file
[3] Date and method of transfer unknown; assumed to be by descent at the time of Anna's death in 1935



Object Last Modified: 10/18/2024