top of page

Damask napkin with daffodil pattern (no. 520)

Description

Chris Lebeau was a very versatile artist and designer. Lebeau made the design for the napkin in the De Witte Zwaan collection on behalf of linen factory EJF Dissel & Zonen in Eindhoven. It is a beautiful example of Lebeau's translation of a nature subject into a stylized pattern. The entire surface is provided with a repeating design of abstractly depicted floral motifs. If you look carefully at the design, you can recognize images of daffodils in the diamond shapes. Until the beginning of the nineteenth century, damask weaving was still done by hand. But with the arrival of the jacquard machine, weaving became faster and less labor-intensive. This made damask accessible to the less well-off.

Joris Johannes Christiaan (‘Chris’) Lebeau

1878 - 1945

linen

68 x 68 cm

Damask napkin with daffodil pattern (no. 520)

Description

Chris Lebeau was a very versatile artist and designer. Lebeau made the design for the napkin in the De Witte Zwaan collection on behalf of linen factory EJF Dissel & Zonen in Eindhoven. It is a beautiful example of Lebeau's translation of a nature subject into a stylized pattern. The entire surface is provided with a repeating design of abstractly depicted floral motifs. If you look carefully at the design, you can recognize images of daffodils in the diamond shapes. Until the beginning of the nineteenth century, damask weaving was still done by hand. But with the arrival of the jacquard machine, weaving became faster and less labor-intensive. This made damask accessible to the less well-off.

Joris Johannes Christiaan (‘Chris’) Lebeau

1878 - 1945

linen

68 x 68 cm

GENERAL INFORMATION

Artist

Lifespan

Title

Date:

Object

Object ID

Joris Johannes Christiaan (‘Chris’) Lebeau

1878 - 1945

Damask napkin with daffodil pattern (no. 520)

ca. 1908

Textiel

WZ.T.053

TECHNICAL DATA

Technology

Size

linen

68 x 68 cm

INSCRIPTIONS

Inscription

Signature | brand

ORIGIN
LITERATURE

Literature

Origin

Year of purchase

Sanny de Zoete, Delft

2008

bottom of page