Thomas Stevens
British, b.1828, d.1888
The Lady Godiva Procession
- c. 1879
- Silk
- Gifted by Mrs Ethel Horrocks
- 235 x 345mm
- 99/270
Tags: animals, elephants, flags, horses (animals), men (male humans), nobles (aristocrats), nudes (representations), people (agents), windows, women (female humans)
Woven silk pictures such as this were produced by Thomas Stevens, of Coventry, England as an extension of that city's long established silk ribbon industry. They were produced by transferring drawn designs to a series of punched cards – one card per row of weaving – so several thousand cards were required for each design. The looms followed the instructions on the punched cards over and over again, just like the instructions in a computer programme. This arrangement was not an original invention: the famous Jacquard loom which first used punched cards dates from 1801.
Stevengraphs, as they were called, were immensely popular and were produced as bookmarks, birthday and Christmas cards and as framed mantlepiece decorations.
The scene depicts Lady Godiva riding naked through the streets of Coventry. Peeping Tom appears as a public house sign, top left.