Damask table linen has adorned festive dining tables since early modern times. These pure white tablecloths, napkins and hand towels, patterned with discreet, but artfully drawn pictorial compositions and coats of arms, served as status symbols in princely and bourgeois households. Almost all linen damasks of the sixteenth and seventeenth century were woven in the Spanish Netherlands or the United Provinces, from where they were exported throughout Europe. From the eighteenth century onwards, linen damasks were also woven in Scotland, Ireland, Sweden and Russia.
This volume presents the papers of an international colloquium hosted at the Abegg-Stiftung in 2021, which brought together scholars to discuss linen damask in its historical context, drawing on surviving table linen, household inventories and pictorial representations.
Riggisberger Berichte 27 | With contributions by A. Cabrera Lafuente, S. Colenbrander, S. van Dijk, N. Fernández de Pinedo, V. Habib, M. Hayward, E. Holsappel, L. Hunkeler, A. Jolly, T. Lekhovich, B. Mackey, D. Mitchell, I. Olovsson, D. White, R. Wise| 224 p., 130 figs., paperbound, 23 x 31 cm, 2024, ISBN 978-3-905014-82-2