John Pine | The tapestry hangings of the House of Lords: Representing the… engagements between the English and Spanish fleets. London, 1739

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28.11.2023 14:00UTC +01:00
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ID 1076589
Lot 66 | John Pine | The tapestry hangings of the House of Lords: Representing the… engagements between the English and Spanish fleets. London, 1739
John Pine

The tapestry hangings of the House of Lords: Representing the several engagements between the English and Spanish fleets, in the ever memorable year MDLXXXVIII. London: John Pine, 1739

FIRST EDITION, folio (534 x 372 mm.), engraved title, 18 ENGRAVED DOUBLE-PAGE PLATES, including five plates each with two engraved maps, one map of the British Isles showing the route of the Spanish Armada, 10 plates of sea battles printed in dark blue-green ink surrounded by engraved black-and-white borders, and two maps of Cornwall, Devon, and the Thames, contemporary sprinkled calf expertly rebacked by James Brockman, spine gilt

One of the major productions of John Pine’s distinguished career, these magnificent plates reproduce tapestries commissioned in 1591 to commemorate the defeat of the Spanish Armada; in the words of ODNB, they are “of the greatest historical value,” since the original hangings were destroyed in the 1834 fire that decimated the Medieval parliamentary buildings where they had been displayed. ODNB notes that engraver and publisher Pine (1690-1756) recognized their worth from the beginning of the project, “since he used his influence to ensure that the Copyright Act of 1735 gave him the exclusive right to copy the tapestries.”

The ten original tapestries were woven from designs by Dutch marine artist Hendrick Vroom (1563-1640) that document the progress of the 1588 naval engagements that would lead to what is generally acknowledged as the greatest naval victory in British history. French artist Clement Lemprière (1683-1746) did the drawings from which these plates were engraved, and the renowned French illustrator Hubert Gravelot (1699-1773) created the elegant borders featuring oval portraits of the battle’s heroes, Sir Francis Drake and Lord Howard among them. The tapestry engravings are printed in dark ink with a blue-green tinge, and the contrast to the black ink of the borders increases the impact of the illustrations.

McMurray informs us that the maps here are taken from charts produced by Robert Adams, cartographer, engraver, and Queen Elizabeth’s Surveyor of Buildings. They were first published in the now very 1588-1590 Expeditionis Hispanorum. The original tapestries occupied a special place in the national imagination, symbolic of British power and strength, and depictions appear in the background of several historical works, including James Gillray’s “Consequences of a Successful French Invasion” (1798), which shows French troops desecrating the sacred artifacts. When plans were made for the Palace of Westminster following the 1834 fire, they included a scheme to replace the tapestries with paintings duplicating six of the original scenes. Although this vision did not come to completion until 2010, it would have been altogether impossible without Pine’s engravings, which were used by the artists involved as the source for their subjects.
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