Tapestry with Playing Putti by Giulio Romano - 1540 - 1545 - 107 x 341 cm Museo Poldi Pezzoli Tapestry with Playing Putti by Giulio Romano - 1540 - 1545 - 107 x 341 cm Museo Poldi Pezzoli

Tapestry with Playing Putti

wool, silk, silver, gold thread • 107 x 341 cm
  • Giulio Romano - c. 1499 - 1 November 1546 Giulio Romano 1540 - 1545

This tapestry is part of a series called “li puttini” in the inventories, woven for Cardinal Ercole Gonzaga. The putti are playing beneath a pergola with chestnut leaves and vine shoots: they climb over an espalier covered with figs and peep through the foliage; they play musical instruments (a drum and a whistle) and dance. The cheerful, animated scene draws on pagan depictions of cupids playing, dancing and gathering fruit. But it is also intended to celebrate the good government of the Gonzagas and so the return of the Mantuan dukedom to a period of childlike happiness, an age of prosperity and harmony.

Happy Friday everyone, I hope you enjoyed this tapestry :)