Not currently on display at the V&A

Furnishing Fabric

ca. 1800 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The scenes on this piece of furnishing fabric are taken from the novel Paul et Virginie, written by Bernardin de St-Pierre and first published in 1788. The novel, telling a tragic story of innocent young love, and set on an island based on Martinique, became hugely popular in France and internationally.

Many depictions of it were made in different decorative arts, stimulated by various revivals of interest in the story when it was translated into opera (1791), and ballet (which ran in Paris from 1808 to 1828). The textile manufacturers Petitpierre et Cie of Nantes produced a plate-printed cotton furnishing fabric, first of all in about 1795, and these pieces appears to be made from the same or copied plates, in the late 18th or early 19th century. This may have been done in Nantes, or in Normandy, near Rouen or Balbec.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Plate printed cotton, quilted onto a linen lining
Brief description
Furnishing fabric, printed cotton, French, possibly Nantes, Petitpierre et Cie, c.1800; Paul et Virginie
Physical description
Piece of cotton furnishing fabric, plate printed in red. It is lined with plain woven linen, with a seam and patch, to which it has been quilted in a diamond pattern in running stitch. The four edges are all cut. The central scene is of Virginie and her mother Madame de la Tour embracing. Paul is with his mother Marguerite.
Dimensions
  • Maximum height: 29cm
  • Maximum width: 22.5cm
Credit line
Given by Mr and Mrs Nicolas Barker
Literary referencePaul et Virginie, novel written by Bernardin de St-Pierre and first published in 1788
Summary
The scenes on this piece of furnishing fabric are taken from the novel Paul et Virginie, written by Bernardin de St-Pierre and first published in 1788. The novel, telling a tragic story of innocent young love, and set on an island based on Martinique, became hugely popular in France and internationally.

Many depictions of it were made in different decorative arts, stimulated by various revivals of interest in the story when it was translated into opera (1791), and ballet (which ran in Paris from 1808 to 1828). The textile manufacturers Petitpierre et Cie of Nantes produced a plate-printed cotton furnishing fabric, first of all in about 1795, and these pieces appears to be made from the same or copied plates, in the late 18th or early 19th century. This may have been done in Nantes, or in Normandy, near Rouen or Balbec.
Associated object
T.149-2014 (Part)
Bibliographic references
  • Mulhouse, exhibition catalogue, Littérature et Toiles imprimées des 18 et 19 siècles, July to October 1965
  • Musée des Arts Décoratifs de Paris, exhibition catalogue, Toiles de Nantes, des XVIIIe et XIXe siècles, February to April 1978
Collection
Accession number
T.148-2014

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Record createdMay 2, 2014
Record URL
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