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Flemish tapestry and wine merchant (d. 1493) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pasquier Grenier (fl. 1447–1493) was a Flemish tapestry and wine merchant working in Tournai, and the greater region under the control of the Dukes of Burgundy.[1][2] Once believed to be a master tapestry weaver, archival documents reveal that he was actually one of the most prominent tapestry dealers of the fifteenth-century in Western Europe, working with tapestry workshops in cities such as Tournai, Bruges, and Antwerp.[1][3][4]
Pasquier Grenier | |
---|---|
Died | 21 July 1493 Tournai, Kingdom of France (present-day Belgium) |
Burial place | Church of Saint Quentin, Tournai |
Nationality | Flemish |
Other names |
|
Occupation(s) | Tapestry and wine merchant |
Years active | 1447–1493 |
Spouse | Marguerite de Lannoy |
Children | 7 |
Website | www |
Pasquier Grenier was the son of Lottart, but his birth year is undocumented, as neither the primary archival sources nor secondary sources cite a date.[5][6] What is known is that on 7 July 1447, Pasquier was officially accepted as a burgher of the city of Tournai.[7][8] At some point (date unknown), he married Marguerite de Lannoy and together they had seven children, who were listed in Pasquier's will including: Gilles, Pierre, Jean, Imbert, Colinet, Antoine (Antonin), and an unnamed daughter married to Corneille Daussat.[6][7] In addition, Pasquier fathered an illegitimate daughter named Mariette.[6][7] His sons Pierre and Gilles were both church canons, while Jean and Imbert were noted as being married.[2][7] Pasquier was a notable and engaged citizen of Tournai and lived in the parish of the Church of Saint Quentin.[6] [9][10]He was also a member of the noble confraternity of the Damoiseaux (founded in 1280), dedicated to the Virgin Mary.[9][10]
Pasquier owned several houses in Tournai, located on the "Grand Market," known today as the Grand-Place, and they were adjacent to the Church of Saint Quentin.[6] The house[Note 1] was left to his son Jean in his will, along with another house in the city of Bruges.[6] His other son, Imbert, was left a house in the town of Guise in France.[6]
Perhaps as early as 1448, Pasquier Grenier is associated with the Truye Brothers, tapestry merchants based in the city of Arras, who named him as their agent in Tournai.[8] Then on 4 February 1449, he is mentioned in archival documents as a Tournai tapestry dealer or merchant (French: "marcheteur") selling his goods to several brokers in different regions of France, including: in 1449, to Pierre Peliche, a merchant in Puy-de-Dôme (in the Auvergne region) and to Jehan Vernie, another merchant in Lyon (in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region).[4][9][11] Later, in 1460, he worked with a merchant named Geradin Glaude based in Reims, and to another unnamed merchant in the Champagne region at an unknown date.[4][9][11] Archival documents also referred to him as a "tapissier" but scholars have argued based on the extant documentation about him that the term "tapissier" did not mean a tapestry (French: tapisserie) weaver, but one who functioned rather as a supplier or dealer.[9][12]
On 20 July 1479, he established political and commercial ties to the King of France, Louis XI, through Olivier le Daim, a courtier and advisor to the King, concerning a matter that came before the magistrate of Tournai and documented in the ancient registers of the "Consaux" (the four colleges that made up Tournai's municipal government).[4][7][9] [13] Then, another Consaux record dated 29 October 1481 explains that Pasquier served as an ambassador for King Louis XI to the city of Tournai.[6][9]
In Burgundy (part of modern-day Flanders in Belgium), Pasquier created a subsidiary company based in Bruges, a major port town, allowing him to export his products to the royal courts of England, Italy, and Spain.[4][9] He also had a showroom filled with an inventory of tapestries in Antwerp, where clients could stop by and purchase an already completed tapestry or set of tapestries (a transaction today referred to as "on spec" meaning the object made was sold on speculation, without a specific buyer) or alternatively the client could order one with him to be woven to their specifications.[4][9] On 22 September 1486, King Edward IV of England granted Pasquier, his son Jean, and their workers protection and licenses to import tapestries, and other textile objects into England.[1][7][14][15] Two years later, King Edward permitted Jean Pasquier to import into the country, duty free, altar cloths and tapestries of the Trojan Warseries (see below).[14]
Pasquier was registered as a wine dealer in the city of Tournai's registers on 30 December 1483.[7][9] It is likely that Pasquier became a wine merchant because of his contacts in France, especially Burgundy.[6] However, he was not the first tapestry dealer to also become a wine seller, a career combination seen earlier in the late fourteenth-century and early fifteenth-century in merchants from the city of Arras, such as Jean (Jehan) Cosset and Hugues (Huart) Walois who sold both wine and tapestries.[16][17][11]
Archival documents, gathered in various secondary sources, shed more specific information on his career, including that Pasquier Grenier sold several sumptuous tapestry sets to Philip the Bold, the Duke of Burgundy as early at 1454–1455.[1][18] He was also the most important supplier of tapestries to later dukes of Burgundy, including Philip the Good and Charles the Bold.[8][19] Documented sales of tapestries (or sets of specific tapestry series) by Pasquier Grenier include the following:
Some tapestry sales do not have archival documentation, but based on stylistic affinities with those surviving tapestries listed above, scholars have proposed that the following set of tapestries was a possible sale of Pasquier Grenier:[37]
From the archival sources, scholars deduce that Pasquier Grenier accumulated significant wealth and status.[1][4] He became a patron of the Church of Saint Quentin, Tournai as early as 1464 or 1469,[Note 3] he provided the funds for the renovation of the east end (chevet) of the Church of Saint Quentin, including the addition of an ambulatory, eight new columns that supported the vaults of the choir, and three new chapels.[2][6][40][41] The central chapel (axial chapel) of the three was dedicated to the Seven Sacraments and later housed the sepulcher of Pasquier and his wife, Marguerite de Lannoy.[41] Pasquier paid in perpetuity for masses to be said in the family's honor four times a week.[6] Later, in 1519, Pasquier's son stipulated in his will that he too was to be buried in the same family chapel.[6]
In addition to paying for the structural changes and additions to the church that were completed by October 1474, Pasquier paid for frescoed wall paintings that were executed between 1474 and 1493, and made with tempera for the axial chapel's ceiling vaults.[6][40] In the vaults, the painting's imagery includes angels, the Four Evangelists (Matthew, Mark, Luke and John), chalices (or ciborium), Eucharistic hosts, and banderoles with text.[2][40] In the center of the keystone vault, Pasquier had a painted sculpture created that includes an angel supporting his coat of arms, but it was over-painted in the nineteenth century, thus the image is not an accurate representation of his crest.[6][40]
Sometime between 1464 or 1469 and 1474, Pasquier Grenier and Marguerite de Lannoy donated a set of seven tapestries of the Seven Sacraments to the Church of Saint Quentin that were in turn hung in the choir of the church.[1][2][6][8] Fragments that survive possibly from Pasquier's set (or more likely a related set that was woven from the same cartoons as those donated to the Church of Saint Quentin by Pasquier) are located in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art,[42] the Victoria and Albert Museum,[43] and the Burrell Collection.[8] Scholars argue that the imagery of the panel in Glasgow includes donor portraits of Pasquier Grenier and his wife, Marguerite de Lannoy, along with their children, but other scholars like Adolph Cavallo doubt this represents the family.[6][8][20]
His testament is dated 13 July 1493 and was entered into record on 24 July 1493.[Note 4] [1][4][6][9][19] It is believed that he died on 21 July 1493.[6] His testament outlined the division of his property among his survivors, including many tapestry models and "cartoons" (French: "patrons") that he specifically left to be "equally divided" among "my children": Jean, Imbert, Colinet, and Antoine.[1][4][9][19] No tapestries were bequeathed in his testament, leaving scholar Guy Delmarcel to deduce that Pasqiuer was indeed a tapestry merchant in that he was essentially a financier who owned the copyright to his models, cartoons, and designs, and he would have likely subcontracted these out to different workshops and weavers who would in turn manufacture the tapestries to be sold on spec or made on the request of a specific patron.[19] Further evidence supports the argument that Pasquier was more of a merchant and agent than a workshop owner, as he did not own any low-warp looms or high-warp looms upon his death, nor did he have any stock of wool.[4][8][31]
Two of Pasquier's sons remained involved with the family business as tapestry dealers after their father's death: Jean (d. Feb. 1519)[9][44] and Antoine.[1] They both continued to sell tapestries till around 1520 to the leading noble families of Europe, including clients such as King Henry VII of England, Philip the Handsome, the Duke of Burgundy, and the Archbishop of Rouen, Georges d'Amboise.[1][8][9] In 1497, Antoine Grenier sold Georges d'Amboise a tapestry altar frontal to be displayed in the Archiepiscopal Palace in Rouen, and then in 1508, Antoine sold him other tapestries for his summer archiepiscopal residence, the Château de Gaillon.[8][9]
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