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Patrick Scott-MEXICAN TAPESTRY, 1983

Currency:EUR Category:Art / General - Paintings Start Price:0.00 EUR Estimated At:4,000.00 - 6,000.00 EUR
Patrick Scott-MEXICAN TAPESTRY, 1983

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Auction Date:2012 May 21 @ 18:00 (UTC+01:00 : BST/CET)
Location:Serpentine Hall, RDS, Anglesea Road entrance, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
Patrick Scott-MEXICAN TAPESTRY, 1983

wool tapestry on cotton warp; uniquesigned on label sewn at rear

85 by 51in., 215.9 by 129.54cm.
Orientation of Image: P

Provenance: Gift from the artist to the present owner

Exhibited:

Literature: Walker, Dorothy, 'Contemporary Irish Tapestry', Irish Arts Review, Vol. 1, no. 2, 1984, pp. 14-19; Peter Lamb, 'Patrick Scott Tapestries', Irish Arts Review, Vol. 19, no. 1, 2002, pp. 48-53

Notes: Hand woven by Benito Hernandez y Hermanos, Teotitlán del Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico. Patrick Scott’s tapestry designs are a highly significant part of his oeuvre. The designs vary according to the tapestry technique employed, taking into account attributes such as the depth of pile and method of tufting. Thus, as Dorothy Walker once noted, ‘his tapestry is no mere transference of his paintings to a woollen surface’ (Irish Arts Review, 1984, pp. 18-9). Scott has also embraced a rainbow-coloured palette of colours for his tapestry designs. He has worked with the famed Aubusson firm of Tabard Frères et Soeurs, in addition to the Irish firm V’Soske Joyce in Galway and individual weaver designers such as Alice Roden and Leonora Fowler. In 1980 he was introduced to a family of weavers in Mexico, resulting in a series of rugs, wall hangings and tapestries being produced over the following four years. Peter Lamb has described this series as follows: The Oaxacan weavers of Mexico operate a cottage industry version of Aubusson. They also produce a fine product, but one which is much looser and more rustic in character. Unlike both V’Soske Joyce and Tabard Frères et Soeurs, which both use chemical dyes, the Oaxacans use mostly animal and vegetable dyes, particularly indigo and cochineal, which are locally produced. Scott worked with Benito Hernandez, a Zapotec Mexican, and his extended family in the weaving village of Teotitlán del Valle from 1981 to 1984 and some of the work was subsequently exhibited in the Museo del Arte Contemporaneo in the city of Oaxaca. (Irish Arts Review, 2002, p. 52)