On Wednesday the world celebrates
International Museum Day. I’ve been lucky to see some of the greatest works
of European art in museums like the Uffizi and the Louvre, and I’m amazed that
something as lovely as The Lady and
the Unicorn, a series of medieval tapestries, came out of an age known more for Barbarian
invaders and the Black Death.
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The Lady and the Unicorn Musée de Cluny, Paris |
The Lady and the Unicorn tapestries are
displayed at the Musée de Cluny (also known as the National Museum of the Middle Ages) in Paris. The museum is located on the site of Gallo-Roman baths on the
city’s Left Bank.
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Courtyard of the Musée de Cluny |
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Courtyard Well |
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Courtyard Sun Dial |
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Thermes de Cluny, Gallo-Roman Thermal Baths |
The six Flemish tapestries were woven from
silk and wool in the 1500s. Historians have interpreted the
series as representing the five senses, plus a sixth more obscure theme
suggested by the caption A mon seul desir
(my sole desire) which appears across the top of the tent.
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The Lady and the Unicorn Tapestries |
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A mon seul désir |
Tracy Chevalier has written a novel about
the making of these tapestries, also titled The Lady and the Unicorn. I'm adding it to my reading list.
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Fan Vaulted Ceiling in the Gothic Chapel Musée de Cluny
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The Musée de Cluny also
displays some of the original stained glass from Sainte-Chapelle, the
magnificent Gothic chapel on Ile de la Cité.
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The Stained Glass Room, Musée de Cluny |
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Original Stained Glass from Sainte Chapelle |
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Stained Glass Windows in the Upper Chapel of Sainte-Chapelle |
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The Rose Window |
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The Lower Chapel |
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Sainte-Chapelle Sculpture |
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