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The stunning tapestry woven by victims of religious persecution

"This tapestry is almost the antithesis of what one expects from a great sixteenth-century weaving."

"This tapestry is almost the antithesis of what one expects from a great sixteenth-century weaving."

Curator Elizabeth Cleland on "Hunters in a Landscape," a Flemish tapestry from the sixteenth century.

Explore this object:
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/236691

Throughout 2013, The Met invited curators from across the Museum to each talk about one artwork that changed the way they see the world.

Photography by Joseph Coscia, Jr.

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Contributors

Elizabeth Cleland
Associate Curator, Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts

Gold-background scene showing two male figures, one with wings, in an embrace, framed by red and blue decorative borders.
Spectrum of Desire co-curators Melanie Holcomb and Nancy Thebaut discuss sensuality and sexuality in Medieval art.
Lina Palazzo
March 18
Female figure with long, dark hair and blue skin stands assertively, eyes wide and tongue out. Her multiple arms hold a sword and severed head, and she wears a necklace and belt of body parts.
Wrathful images of the divine in South Asia are meant to protect and nurture, not to be feared.
Vaishnavi Patil
March 9
Silver fish sculpture with emerald green eyes, lifelike scales, and visible details.
How do these exquisite examples of Judaica represent universal themes related to special days in the Jewish calendar?
Riva Arnold
February 20
More in:82nd and Fifth: Art ExplainedPoliticsReligion & SpiritualityNature

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Hunters in a Landscape, Anonymous, 16th century, Wool, silk (14 warps per inch; 5-6 per cm), British, probably London
Multiple artists/makers
ca. 1575–95