Last year, I visited the St Nicolai Church in Kalkar, Germany. Kalkar was an important and wealthy city in the late medieval period. It was never very large, but with proud inhabitants who used their monetary power to decorate the place beautifully. Although no longer important from the 17th century onwards, and even reverting to city farming (think Detroit!) until well into the 19th century, Kalkar is well worth a visit. Especially as the St Nicolai Church has one of the most important church treasures still in its original place, and among it, are four spectacularly embroidered late medieval vestments made in the Low Countries. These vestments enhance the many beautiful altarpieces with their paintings and sculptures. You can really see that they form a unity. Think of them in 2-D, and you have an embroidery pattern. The church inventory lists more than 100 vestments in AD 1543. Many of which were donated by important Kalkar families. Today, four of these vestments are displayed in the church treasury. You will need to visit on a sunny day as natural light is the only light source for these beauties. All four vestments are made of red velvet and decorated with the typical orphreys seen in the Low Countries. On display are: two copes, a dalmatic and a chasuble. We will explore the chasuble in this blog post. The chasuble is a testament to the rich cultural heritage of the Northern Netherlands. Its beautifully embroidered orphreys, crafted around AD 1525, are a sight to behold. This chasuble, mentioned in the church inventory of AD 1543, was a generous donation by Wolter van Riswick in AD 1530. Wolter, hailing from a wealthy family, along with his brothers, contributed significantly to this church and the one in nearby Xanten. The front of the chasuble features an embroidered column with three scenes: the women visiting the grave, Noli me tangere, and the road to Emmaus appearance. Although the front of the chasuble is currently on display, the back shows a most elaborate scene of the Crucifixion, followed by the burial of Jesus and the Resurrection. The embroidery is exquisite, and many techniques are used. There's finely shaded or nue for the clothing of most of the figures. There's diaper couching behind the crucified Christ, as well as on the beams forming the cross. The landscape is mainly made up of Italian Stitch/Couching (laid silk couched down with a single gold thread). The frame around the orphrey has been padded with string to form the zig-zag pattern with the dots. The blue scallops are also intricately stitched by recombining and twisting gold threads that come from the regular couching further up. All in all, this was a costly piece of embroidery executed by one of the leading embroidery ateliers in the Northern Netherlands.
Literature Werd, G. de, 2016. St. Nicolaikirche Kalkar, Deutscher Kunstverlag Berlin München.
4 Comments
Dagmar
8/10/2024 20:46:04
What a complex scenery! I love the or nue work very much! Very impressing. New to me: Italian shading. Never heard of it before. Unfortunately it doesn`t show very good on the photograph. Would couching silk with a gold thread not wear out the thread when going up and down to fix the silk? However, guess this looks very nice indeed. Are the couching stitches in regular distance to each other or are they stitched irregulary to create some kind of shading effect? (hope it translates what I mean :-)
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10/10/2024 16:31:14
Ups, made a mistake in terminology there, Dagmar, sorry! It is actually Italian Stitch or Italian Couching. I wrote a tutorial about the technique a while ago: https://www.patreon.com/posts/tutorial-tiled-79961101?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link. You can find it on my Patreon page. Tiled floors and skies in 15th and 16th century orphreys from the Low Countries often use the same technique. There is actually no shading, just blinging things up. As you use a matching silk thread to couch down the single gold thread, there's no problem with thread wear.
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Dagmar
11/10/2024 08:25:40
Got it, thanks Jessica. Will check this out. And thanks for clarifying about terminology. I would not have noticed anyways :-). Learned a lot this week! Your comment will be posted after it is approved.
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