Title
The Virtues intercede for Man, or the second Paradise process. Serie Virtues and Vices. Tapestry from the cathedral of Palencia
Generic classification
TextilesObject
TapestryDate
1515-1520Century
First half of the 16th c.Cultural context / style
Flemish tapestriesDimensions
13'6'' x 21'Technique
WovenIconography / Theme
Vicios y virtudesProvenance
Palencia Cathedral (Palencia, Spain)Current location
Musées royaux des Beaux-Arts, Belgium (Brussels, Belgium)Inventory Number in Current Collection
9920Object history
On March 18, 1519, when the canons of the cathedral of Palencia met, "the said gentlemen ordered the treasurer and workers to buy up to two hundred and fifty rings of the tapestry that they deemed necessary for the said church due to the lack and need for it", documentation contained in the chapter minutes preserved in the archives of the cathedral of Palencia. According to what is stated, the temple had a shortage of cloths and, considering that their possession brought magnificence, they wanted to acquire them. Taking into account that a Castilian vara has 1.2 Flemish anas ("çinco varas de Castilla por seys anas de Flandes", according to the documents in the General Archive of Simancas), and that a vara, three feet, is 835.905 mm, it was about one hundred square meters of tapestry.
The disposition does not specify how many tapestries were to be acquired, although from the dimensions they had, about sixty anas each (about twenty-five square meters), it seems that they had already decided that they were going to buy four cloths. This must have been so because in 1524 it is noted that there were "quatro tapices grandes nuevos buenos de LX anas de ras", representing the story of the Vices and Virtues. Given the time it took to manufacture a cloth, it is more than likely that they were not commissioned, but were acquired from a merchant, perhaps at the important Medina del Campo Fair, and hence before five years had elapsed since the purchase agreement, they were documented in the cathedral.
We do not know how much they cost, but due to their size they must have cost a considerable sum. However, fifteen years after their acquisition, the former bishop of Palencia, Juan Rodríguez de Fonseca, died as bishop of Burgos, and left to his last see and to that of Palencia two sets of four cloths each. Those of Bishop Fonseca were of a larger size "quatro tapices grandes de ochenta anas" and in 1624 were inventoried as "historias del Testamento Viejo y Nuevo" (stories of the Old and New Testament).
The cloths purchased according to the agreement of 1519, although lacking marks for their style, were manufactured in Brussels around 1515. After their entry into the cathedral of Palencia, they must have continued to hang in the cathedral, although there is no information that allows us to know where, since they continued to fulfill their task of giving magnificence, while the four donated by Bishop Fonseca were placed in the chapter house, where they remain today.
In the first decades of the 20th century the traffic of Spanish works of art was considerable. Without a law to protect the patrimony, each owner did what he considered and if juicy profits were obtained from their sale, there were no qualms about getting rid of the pieces. In the case of the tapestries of the cathedral of Palencia, it seems that the first interested party was Lionel Harris (1862-1943), founder of The Spanish Art Gallery (London), one of the main international antique dealers of works of art from Spain. Harris was after the cloths treasured by the cathedral of Burgos, especially the four donated by Juan Rodríguez de Fonseca, two of which were eventually sold, although not to Harris, and are now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
Harris had also shown interest in the Palencia Cathedral tapestries, although they were finally acquired by the art dealer Arthur Byne (1884-1935) for the American magnate William R. Hearst. Byne, in 1928, drew attention to the Flemish cloths of the temple, and it seems that he then dealt with the secretary of the bishopric. Three years later he received a letter from the dean of the cathedral in which he offered him four cloths: "1931. Dean of Palencia offered set of four Gothic tapestries by letter to S. A. G. Asked 120.000 ptas each. Bought By Hearst" (Archivo José A. Buces, Books Lionel and Tomás Harris, Book II, Palencia).
However, the transaction was being done in secret, for while the dean of the cathedral was negotiating its sale, this was denied by the chapter representative, Matías Vielva, present at the session of the Provincial Commission of Monuments of Palencia, where the rumor circulating about the possibility that the chapter was in negotiations to sell several tapestries was debated. Vielva stated that the canons only wanted to know the value of the tapestries, but in no case to sell them. This was not true, as the four tapestries were eventually sold to Arthur Byne, who sold them to Hearst. Hearst paid for them for $112,500, an amount he paid in two disbursements to Byne, on March 1 and September 17, 1935, to which must be added the expenses derived from their export: $114,665.53. (Hearst Archive at the C. W. Post Center). The sale was consummated without the Dirección General de Bellas Artes having any news of it until the tapestries were out of Spain.
Byne convinced Hearst to buy the tapestries with an argument that was false, although perhaps the dealer did not know it. There was some confusion between the four cloths still in the cathedral and these to determine their provenance. Byne argued that they were those given by Bishop Fonseca, when in fact they were not, since they are the ones that are exhibited in the chapter house today; however, both hangings were manufactured in Flanders at the same time, in the second decade of the 16th century, and had similar themes: those acquired by Hearst show the struggle between the Vices and the Virtues and those that remain in the cathedral of Palencia were part of a series that although in the inventory of the seventeenth century was called the Old and New Testament, actually show the story of the Redemption of Man; those preserved in Palencia are the Vices lead Man to sin, Christ the Savior as a Child, the Virtues defy the Vices when Christ begins his ministry and Christ ascends to Heaven and Man is redeemed before God, which are numbers 2, 5, 6 and 9 of the series of ten cloths that belonged to Juan Rodriguez de Fonseca.
This theme of vices or sins and virtues became very popular in Flemish tapestry from the end of the 15th century. Based on French and German devotional literature, with very influential authors such as Bernard of Clairvaux or Ludolph of Saxony, the representation of sinful Man and his fall from grace to redemption thanks to the arrival of Jesus Christ, with the final triumph of the Virtues, was repeated many times although with differences. These are based on the merchants' interest in variety in order to find a greater number of buyers, which led them to introduce or eliminate characters from the original cartons, but also to the demands of the customers who often wanted to enlarge or reduce a series, so that the scenes had to be rearranged.
From a formal point of view, the Vices and Virtues panels do not differ from the medieval aesthetics, which involved bringing together many characters and different episodes in the same panel. However, there is a dissimilarity between the tapestries of the 15th century and those of the early 16th century due to the incorporation of a border, usually with vegetal elements. The cloths of the cathedral of Palencia bought by Hearst were auctioned after the collapse of his empire. In one of the catalogs for the sale of the magnate's collection, published by Gimbel's in 1941, the four tapestries from Palencia appear(Art objects an Furnishings from the William Randolph Hearst Collection. Presented by Gimbel Brothers New York in cooperation with Saks Fifth Avenue. Under the Direction of Hammer Galleries, New York, 1941, numbers 1203-4, p. 84). Shortly thereafter, in 1943, they were sold to French & Co. of New York for $17,250, a price well below what Hearst had paid years earlier. In 1964 they were acquired by the Musées Royaux d'Art et d'Histoire (Musée du Cinquantenaire) in Brussels, thus closing the journey of these tapestries, which were manufactured in Brussels and passed to the cathedral of Palencia, to travel to the U.S. and finally back to Brussels.
Description
Virtues intercede for man, or the second Paradise Process
The last tapestry, if it is really the fourth in the series, since not all researchers agree, is very difficult to interpret. One might expect it to show more episodes of the parable of the Prodigal Son, and yet to some extent it repeats the theme of the second, for it is the appeal to Jesus Christ by some Virtues for the forgiveness of mankind, while others advocate punishment. According to Schoutheete the theme would be inspired by a Parisian work of 1507. In the upper part, from left to right, are placed different groups of men and women, especially women, who show their repentance by prostrating on their knees. With their hands together in an attitude of humility they ask before the Virtues, who cannot be identified with certainty, the forgiveness of their sins. In the first group, at the feet of the penitent, a pig's head appears, which could be a reference to the parable of the Prodigal Son, but also to lust, which in the first panel of the series is represented as a woman riding a pig. In the upper corner Jesus Christ enthroned listens to the Virtues, among which we can distinguish Peace or Justice.
Again Peace, recognizable by holding an olive branch, appears on the left in the lower register, which corresponds to our world, and at her feet is a sword that no one wields because it would no longer be necessary to do so. Without solution of continuity figures are grouped that it is not easy to discern what they represent. A woman kneeling with a mirror in which she is reflected could be Lust, defeated by Mercy, who leans towards her. The other, many, characters are in animated debates by small groups no doubt on the importance of a virtuous life, and forgiveness to humanity for having strayed from the path traced by God.
Locations
1519 - 1935
cathedral
Palencia Cathedral, Palencia (Spain)
1935
dealer/antiquarian
Arthur Byne and Mildred Stapley Byne, Madrid (Spain) *
1935 - 1943
private collection
Collection of William R. Hearst, New York (United States) *
1943 - 1964
dealer/antiquarian
French & Company, New York (United States) *
1964 - present
Bibliography
- CAVALLO, Adolfo S. (1993): Medieval tapestries in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Nueva York.
- DELMARCEL, Guy (1999): Flemish Tapestry, Thames & Hudson, Londres.
- DELMARCEL, Guy y DE MEÛTER, Ingrid (2023): The Cinquantenaire tapestries. The collection of the Royal Museums of Art and History, Royal Museums of Art and History, Bruselas.
- MARTÍNEZ RUIZ, María José (2008): La enajenación del patrimonio en Castilla y León (1900-1936), tomo I, Junta de Castilla y León, Salamanca.
- MERINO DE CÁCERES, José Miguel y MARTÍNEZ RUIZ, María José (2012): La destrucción del patrimonio artístico español. W. R. Hearst “el gran acaparador", Cátedra, Madrid.
- RAMOS DE CASTRO, Guadalupe (1999): "La tapicería del Antiguo y Nuevo Testamento", en Las Edades del Hombre. Memoria y esplendores (cat.-exp.), Fundación de las Edades del Hombre, Palencia, pp. 136-144.
- SAGARRA, Adelaida (2006): Juan Rodríguez Fonseca: un toresano en dos mundos, Diputación Provincial de Zamora, Instituto de Estudios Zamoranos "Florián de Ocampo", Zamora.
- STEPPE, Jan-Karel (1976): "Le triomphe des Vertus sur les Vice", en Tapisseries bruxelloises de la pré-Renaissance (cat.-exp.), Musées Royaux d'Art et d’Histoire,, Briselas, pp. 100-115.
- ZALAMA, Miguel Ángel (2021): "Tapices del obispo Fonseca donados a la catedral de Burgos. Pasado y presente", en Read & Made. Reunart. VIII centenario Catedral de Burgos. Splendor Burgalensis, pp. 164-169.
- ZALAMA, Miguel Ángel y MARTÍNEZ RUIZ, María José (2007): "“Tapestries of the cathedral of Palencia in the Musées Royaux d’Art et d’Histoire in Brussels: bishop Fonseca, the sale of the canvases and the magnate Hearst”.", en Jaarboek Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten - Antwerp Royal Museum Annual , pp. 155-175.
- ZALAMA, Miguel Ángel y MARTÍNEZ RUIZ, María José "Tapices del obispo Juan Rodríguez de Fonseca en las catedrales de Palencia y Burgos: desde la donación a nuestros días", en Alma Arts: estudios de arte e historia en homenaje al Dr. Salvador Andrés Ordax, coord. por ZALAMA, Miguel Ángel y MOGOLLÓN CANO-CORTÉS, Pilar, Universidad de Valladolid, Valladolid.
Citation:
Miguel Ángel Zalama and María José Martínez Ruiz, "The Virtues intercede for Man, or the second Paradise process. Serie Virtues and Vices. Tapestry from the cathedral of Palencia" in Nostra et Mundi. Cultural Heritage from Castile and Leon around the world, Fundación Castilla y León, 2025. https://inventario.nostraetmundi.com/en/work/263
Virtues and the salvation of man. Tapestry from Palencia Cathedral
W. R. Hearst Archives. Special Collections B. D. Davis Schwartz Memorial LIbrary, Long Island Univeristy Brookville, New York
W. R. Hearst Archives. Special Collections B. D. Davis Schwartz Memorial LIbrary, Long Island Univeristy Brookville, New York