
Drapery.
Drapery is a general word referring to
cloths or
textiles (
Old French drap, from
Late Latin drappus). It may refer to
cloth used for decorative purposes - such as around windows - or to
the trade of retailing cloth, originally mostly for clothing,
formerly conducted by
drapers. Even small
British towns had several
drapers' shops
until quite recently, when ready-made
clothes,
curtains, etc have
become the norm. Several
department
stores originated as drapers' shops.
In
art history, drapery refers to any
cloth or textile depicted, which is usually mostly clothing. The
schematic depiction of the folds and woven patterns of
loose-hanging clothing on the human form, with ancient prototypes,
was reimagined as an adjunct to the female form by Greek
vase-painters and sculptors of the earliest fifth century and has
remained a major source of stylistic formulas in sculpture and
painting, even after the
Renaissance
adoption of tighter-fitting clothing styles. After the Renaissance,
large cloths with no very obvious purpose are often used
decoratively, especially in portraits in the
grand manner; these are also known as
draperies.
For the Greeks, as
Sir Kenneth
Clark noted, clinging drapery followed the planes and contours
of the bodily form,, emphasizing its twist and stretch: "floating
drapery makes visible the line of movement through which it has
just passed.... Drapery, by suggesting lines of force, indicates
for each action a past and a possible future."
Clark contrasted the
formalized draperies in the frieze at Olympia with the sculptural
frieze figures of the Parthenon
, where "it has attained a freedom and an expressive
power that have never been equalled except by Leonardo da Vinci". Undraped male
figures, Clark observed, "were kept in motion by their flying
cloaks."
Gallery of drapery in art
File:Poppaea Olimpia.jpg|
Poppaea, wife of
NeroFile:BambergApocalypse03CoronationOfEmperor.JPG|The
Bamberg ApocalypseFile:Edgar in
Regularis Concordia.jpg|11th century
Anglo-Saxon
miniatureFile:Cumberland-Reynolds.jpg|Portrait by
Joshua Reynolds of one of George III's sons,
with lavish robes and including a hanging drapery above
Notes