Behold the Beauty: A Wife’s Fidelity and a Rare American Needlework

This sole surviving ‘needle-woven tapestry’ depicts the virtues of Homer’s Queen Penelope at her loom.
Behold the Beauty: A Wife’s Fidelity and a Rare American Needlework
“Penelope Unraveling Her Work at Night," 1886, by Dora Wheeler. Silk embroidered with silk thread; 45 inches by 68 inches. Purchase, Sylvia and Leonard Marx Gift and funds from various donors, 2002. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City. Public Domain
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Artists have long admired the heroic adventures and life lessons woven throughout Homer’s epic poems, the “Iliad” and the “Odyssey.” They have captured episodes of these ancient Greek works countless times, always hoping to inspire viewers to cultivate virtue and to better themselves.

One popular muse is Homer’s Penelope, an honorable queen in the “Odyssey,” extolled for her prudence and marital fidelity. Homer wrote:

The fame of her great virtue will never die. The immortal gods will lift a song for all mankind, a glorious song in praise of self-possessed Penelope.

In the “Odyssey,” Queen Penelope’s husband, Odysseus, has been away from home fighting in the Trojan War for many years. Every day, suitors ask for the queen’s hand in marriage because Odysseus has been gone for so long and is presumed dead.
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Lorraine Ferrier
Lorraine Ferrier
Author
Lorraine Ferrier writes about fine arts and craftsmanship for The Epoch Times. She focuses on artists and artisans, primarily in North America and Europe, who imbue their works with beauty and traditional values. She's especially interested in giving a voice to the rare and lesser-known arts and crafts, in the hope that we can preserve our traditional art heritage. She lives and writes in a London suburb, in England.