View enlargement
Zoom image
Email to a friend
Print this page
After a design by Claude III Audran (1658–1734), 1708–09
Woven at the Manufacture Royale des Gobelins
France, Paris
The Month of July/The Sign of Leo, from The Grotesque Months, c. 1726
Wool and silk, slit and double interlocking tapestry weave
66.5 x 293.6 cm (26 1/8 x 115 1/2 in.)
Bessie Bennett Endowment, 1951.261
This narrow panel and its companion belong to a suite known as The Grotesque Months, which depicts the 12 months of the year and their associated zodiac signs. A Roman deity, centrally positioned within a pergola, personifies each month. July, with the sign of Leo—a lion—appears in a grisaille cartouche near the top of this tapestry. The bearded Jupiter sits on a great eagle amid storm clouds, and the fleece and head of Amalthea, the goat that suckled the infant god, hangs from the top of the pergola. Other attributes associated with Jupiter appear above and below the god.
— Exhibition label, The Divine Art: Four Centuries of European Tapestries, November 1, 2008–January 4, 2009, Regenstein Hall.