Albert Auwercx (sometimes Auwerx) (c. 1629 - 1709)[2] was a Brussels tapestry-maker (tapissier) who played an important part in the tapestry industry of that city. His workshop partner was his brother Nicolas[3]
^Cyrus Defeats Spargapises, from The Story of Cyrus. Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
^Brosens, Koenraad. "Revisiting Brussels Tapestry, 1700–1740: New Data on Tapissiers Albert Auwercx and Judocus de Vos". Textile History, 43 (2), pp. 183–199, November 2012.
^For instance, together, according to the contract signed 16 December 1699, for the tapestry set glorifying The House of Moncada, for which cartoons were provided by Lambert de Hondt. (Guy Delmarcel et al.. "Spanish family pride in Flemish wool and silk", in Thomas Patrick Campbell, Elizabeth A. H. Clelan, eds. Tapestry in the Baroque: New Aspects of Production and Patronage (Metropolitan Museum of Art). 2010, p287f.
AlbertAuwercx (sometimes Auwerx) (c. 1629 - 1709) was a Brussels tapestry-maker (tapissier) who played an important part in the tapestry industry of that...
Defeats Spargapises,” from The Story of Cyrus, Adapted from designs by Michiel Coxie (1499–1592), Woven at the workshop of AlbertAuwercx (1629–1709)...
Hitler a gift, he asked Angerer to buy eight Flemish tapestries from AlbertAuwercx's series of "Gothic Myths", as the Nazis called these allegorical subjects...