The Story of Troy is a set of seven embroidered tapestries illustrating stories about the Trojan War made by Ming Chinese artisans of Macau in the 1620s.[1][2] All of the tapestries are connected by a common border design containing Portuguese patterns a pair of phoenixes at the top, a lion and griffin at the bottom, and a triton and serpent on each side. The four corners of each tapestry are adourned by the same coat of arms, identified as an erroneous depiction of the family crest of Francisco Mascarenhas, the first governor of Macau. It is believed, if the identification proves correct, that Mascarenhas commissioned the tapestries to emphasize the legitimacy of the Portuguese presence in Asia represented by Macau after an unsuccessful Dutch attempt to take the city.[1] There are doubts about this identification, however, since it is not known if Mascarenhas would have accepted a product with the wrong family crests,[3] though there are Jingdezhen porcelain bearing inaccurate crests positively attributed to Francisco Mascarenhas.[4]
Despite the classic Western theme, the series of tapestries are laden with Chinese motifs—such as the clouds and waves depicted in the Chinese style, and the presence of lychee, a fruit not native to Europe—reflecting the significant involvement and degree of freedom the Chinese embroiderers had in the work.[3] The hangings make use of cotton, wool, silk, and gold thread, but at some point the gold threads were stripped away for the flesh parts of the figures and replaced with silk satin pieces painted in the Western style.[5] An analysis of the paint revealed that the blue-green pigments were often used in European contexts, but not in Asia; conversely, the white pigments were often found in Asian contexts (specifically Japanese) but not European ones. This suggests that the painted portions may have been the work of Chinese artists who had studied Western painting under the Jesuits in Japan, such as Ni Yicheng (倪一誠; christened as Jacobe Niva) and Yu Wenhui (游文輝; christened as Emmanuel Pereira), students of Giovanni Niccolò.[3]
Four tapestries of the set had belonged to the American art collector Henry G. Marquand until his death, upon which the tapestries were auctioned off.[2] Of the original seven tapestries, three are now in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, two are in the Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon,[1] while one was considered to be in private hands until it reemerged in 2024 as an exhibit of the Poly MGM Museum in the MGM Macau casino resort.[6] One remains unaccounted for, being last seen in a 1934 auction in Florence.[1][7]
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