The Other Bayeux Tapestry...
Feb. 20th, 2010 09:36 pmThe Bayeux Tapestry is one of my favourite things. It's a piece of art that was made about 900 years ago, a comic book in needlework, depicting the conquest of England by William of Normandy at the Battle of Hastings. The text is in Latin.
It's magnificent.
I've never seen the original, which is in Bayeux Cathedral in Normandy, and I hope to see it this year. I have numerous reproductions and books, and a collection of things with a Bayeux Tapestry motif: a coffee mug, a sweater knitted by my friend Anne, a tin box.
When Anne and Lisa went to Bayeux, long ago, she got me a needlework kit depicting a scene from the Tapestry. I was working on it when my mother was ill and dying. I never saw it again after she died. It's a happy memory of those last days of her life.
Seems I'm not the only person who was doing this sort of thing - associating working on the tapestry with a personal death. A French professor at the University of Waterloo, Roy Dugan, was working on reproducing the whole tapestry when his sons died in an accident. He not only completed the whole Tapestry (at 90% the size of the original) but added his own finale - the original is torn and the last part is missing.
Dugan said in a CBC interview:
It gives me tremendous joy and sense of accomplishment to be able to offer my version of this magnificent tapestry to a public who might never have the privilege of seeing the real thing. At the same time it is a work that has great personal significance for me. What had been a pastime became a central point in my life. I proved to myself that I could still contribute.... My sense of loss will never disappear, but the Bayeux Tapestry gave me a purpose when everything else seemed meaningless. It is dedicated to the memory of my two sons.
When I learned that this copy of the Bayeux Tapestry was on display at the Mississippi Valley Textile Museum in Almonte, Ontario, I desperately wanted to see it, and persuaded
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Almonte is a historic town of old textile mills, one of which has been made into a museum. The museum is currently being renovated and won't be open until next autumn, but the Tapestry is on display while reconstruction continues. The friendly girl at the ticket office cum gift shop sold us our tickets (entry fee $5) and waved us into the room.
( It looked like this... )