Museum PR Announcements News and Information

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Tapestry Room Restoration

For the first time since it opened in 1914, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum’s 4,000-square-foot Tapestry Room is being restored to its original glory and will once again take its place as one of the nation’s great tapestry halls. The restoration of this beloved space will return the Tapestry Room to its original configuration for the first time since a temporary stage, chairs, and other modern elements were added to accommodate formal concerts in the early 1970s.

Historically, the Tapestry Room has been both a gallery and home to many of the museum’s programs, including the popular Sunday Concert Series. Now, as part of the Gardner Museum’s Extension and Preservation Project, the museum’s world-class concerts will be relocated to an intimate new performance hall in the Renzo Piano-designed addition, and the Gardner will be able to restore the space to its historic appearance, enabling visitors to see and enjoy the Tapestry Room for the first time in nearly 40 years. No event programming is scheduled for 2011 in the Tapestry Room; programming will resume in 2012 in the new wing and the gallery will remain open until then so that visitors can view the conservation and preservation work taking place. The reinstalled Tapestry Room will be highlighted as part of the museum’s Grand Opening for its new wing in January 2012.

“One of the most important goals of the new wing is the relocation of programming which has outgrown the historic galleries,” says Anne Hawley, the Norma Jean Calderwood Director of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. “The Tapestry Room is perhaps the most dramatic example of that as it had become the hub of the museum’s largest and most popular programming and had lost its focus as a gallery. This effort returns the space into a beautiful gallery for viewing tapestries-something an entire generation of visitors has not experienced.”

The new 70,000-square-foot wing designed by Renzo Piano includes purpose-built spaces for many of the activities formerly held in the Tapestry Room, such as lectures, visitor orientation, and the Sunday Concert Series. While occasional smaller musical performances and talks will continue in the reinstalled space, the Tapestry Room will serve primarily as a grand gallery for viewing tapestries and other works of art.

Curatorial and conservation staffs have planned the preservation and reinstallation of the Tapestry Room based on historic photographs from the museum’s archives, which were taken in 1915, 1916, and 1926 by photographer T.E. Marr and Son. The photographs reveal a piano placed in front of the late 14th-century French fireplace and an arrangement of furniture and objects in the center of the gallery.

“The Tapestry Room is one of the few galleries affording room to wander freely,” says Gianfranco Pocobene, Head of Conservation at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, who is overseeing the restoration of the Tapestry Room objects and gallery to their original grandeur. “The sense of space and openness that visitors will discover in the restored Tapestry Room will be amazing-and unexpected for many-and a celebration of Gardner’s original vision.”

Conservation treatment will encompass cleaning, restoration, and reinstallation of many parts of the gallery-including its Mercer-tiled floors and French medieval stone fireplace, select art and furniture objects, and new lighting. The historic arrangement of furniture in the center of the gallery and other vignettes around the windows as depicted in early photographs also will be restored. Two of the most striking areas will be the conservation of the massive fireplace and the painting of The Archangel Michael by Pedro García de Benabarre (ca. 1470) that hangs above it, and an arrangement of ten side chairs upholstered in 18th-century Netherlandish painted leather that will be reinstalled around a 17th-century Dutch table in the center of the gallery. Additionally, lighting upgrades will enhance the gallery’s historic atmosphere, reduce harmful light on the collection and improve visibility. Eighteen textile projects are included in the room refurbishment plans. They include conserving original textiles, re-upholstering furniture, and replacing missing, damaged, or inappropriate furnishing textiles. Two tapestries will be reinstated to their original 1926 positions.

In 1914, eleven years after the opening of the museum, Isabella Gardner embarked on a major renovation. She altered the two-story Music Room and built two floors of galleries to create not only her grand Tapestry Room but also to construct the East and Spanish Cloister, Spanish Chapel, Chinese Loggia, and a Chinese Room. In the expansive 4,000-square-foot Tapestry Room, she displayed two tapestry cycles which once hung in the Barberini Palace, Rome: scenes from the Story of Abraham (Flemish, Brussels, 1550-1600), and scenes from the life of Cyrus the Great (Flemish, Brussels, 1535-50). The architecture, and size of the room with the commanding fireplace at one end, recalls the great tapestry halls of Europe. In her lifetime, Gardner placed a piano in the gallery and used the room to present concerts and other assemblies and events. According to archival documents, Gardner began to show friends her plans for the space as early as 1908.

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
280 The Fenway, Boston MA, 02115
www.gardnermuseum.org

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *