rugtracker

Thursday 28 May 2015

Lineage III : India and Khorasan

After the disintegration of the Safavid carpet tradition in the 18th century,the RGF design split into three different styles:a group with predominantly Palmette design;another with Palmette and adjuncts,called the “Harshang”,or crab design;and a repeat design  of split-leaf arabesques,named “Afshan”,elements of which had already appeared in early 17th century Persian carpets.These borrowings had presumably occurred before the downfall of the Safavid Dynasty;but by the 18th century they were in full swing.A small group of Indian carpets employs the Harshang design,but its origins likely lay in Khorasan.
The “Trinitarias “ Group,named after a carpet now in Australia,originally descends from a grand Persian carpet in the Bardini Museum,Florence.



250-Bardini Museum 730/456



250a-Terborch,c.1675


This carpet has been dated by some authorities to as early as 1500,due apparently,to its circular medallion.Murray Eiland demolishes this line of thought in Ghereh 21/42.The field design is basically that of a middle-period RGF,already showing signs of simplification.The border is a standard in the Tabriz(?) Medallion repertoire,but a superior example was once in the McMullan Collection.Its gigantic sidewinders reveal to what lengths cloudbands can go.






251




Nevertheless the field of the Bardini carpet had a great deal of influence in the North-West Persian Zone of the 18th Century.


252-C.John


Next in the chain of command is another medallion carpet in the Musee des Arts decoratifs,Paris.


253-von Scala 1908

254-Pope  



The Paris and Florence carpets are roughly the same size,but the Paris carpet appears more packed in the vertical.The border has changed to a cartouche type,with round and oblong shapes connected by Astragals. 

The Trintarias carpet is the largest of all,weighing in at a mighty 1044 x 336 cms.It represents a further simplification,and on this piece real Harshang forms appear to have mutated out of the flaming palmettes on the other carpets.


255




256



The palmettes have become larger and more frequent in the field.Note the corner solution at the beginning-identical to that in the Bardini.




257-The Trinitarias Carpet


Another piece in the Burrell Collection features even more prominent Harshang palmettes.



258

259



A fragment published by Pope from the Collection of Edith McCormick Rockefeller(of Emperor`s Carpet fame)employs the same border as the Paris/Auckland carpets,but also introduces animal depictions.Pope does not describe the piece in his text,but it clearly belongs to the Trinitarias Group.



260




After a journey to Istanbul in 1964,Ulrich Schurmann wrote a report for Weltkunst in which he described a NW Persian carpet seen at the Turk ve Islam, attributed to Azerbaijan.It is large,but simpler in design than the preceeding examples.


261-Weltkunst



A fragment in the Burrell Collection is perhaps from the same group,although it has corner medallions in the field.The Harshangs lay horizontally in the field and are very mature.Perhaps it is Khorasan work.


262-Burrell



A number of examples exist which are obviously simplified copies,from the area known in rug-circles as the"Golden Triangle"One such was sold at Christies in 1998.


263-Christies 15 October 1998(301)


Even an embroidery with this pattern is known.


264-Petsopoulos,Tulips,130




A fragment published by the TKF shows impending horizontal Harshang Palmettes on what is said to be an Indian carpet;no tech info is available.

A carpet in Coimbra in standard Indian garb depicts palmettes at 90 degrees and   upright jewel in the Lotus.


265-TKF






266-Coimbra



No review would be complete without examples from the Deccan,those poor cousins of Lahore.


267-Japanese Collections


The author has deliberately avoided the contentious issue of "Persia or India"for the mass of apparently later RGFs.More important seems to be"17th or 19th Century",in the face of a number of excellent later reproductions.One carpet in Berlin springs to mind,which was discovered to be 19th century after dye analysis.


268



Mr.Perez could still remember the ustad of this carpet,said to have been alive in 1953.


269-Perez



270-Reverse side of two Khorasan carpets



Herat,the capital of the Timurid Empire and of Khorasan,has now fallen into disfavour as a carpet-weaving location,but it is far too important historically to dismiss.It was the artistic and administrative capital of the Timurids until 1507.Surely such a centre would have produced the most exclusive and luxurious carpets?That was at least the thinking behind the earliest carpet attributions.The following selection of carpets with Harshang design may or may not have originated in Greater Khorasan.Otherwise they should be described as “East Persian”Many of them include extensive Jufti-Knotting,said by Cecil Edwards to have been a characteristic of Persian Khorasan weaving.Combined with a two-shoot weft structure,this leads to a floppier weave and more painterly style.Edwards considered the Jufti knot to be a fraudulent technique.It seems to have been employed in large areas of plain field,but it is actually a method of drawing fine contours,used even in China.It should be further noted that Edward`s drawings of Persian and Jufti knots are incorrect.The designs were later copied in North West Persia by a process of design osmosis,till now not quite understood.

What appears to be the earliest Persian rug with Harshang design and a drop repeat from an RGF  is an august gentleman once with Duveen and then Yves Mikaeloff,twice auctioned and reviewed by Hali,and even including"fat parrots" in its field design.




271






Initially ascribing this carpet to Isfahan in their 1988,review,Hali`s hardy editorial team backpedaled to a Khorasan attribution(Hali 40-80+96-141)The Harshangs are lain out vertically,but the whole is more relaxed than the Trinitarias group,perhaps due to the jufti knottting and 2 ply blue weft.


Almost eight metres long and with 2 ply weft and jufti pile,the next example in Vienna has a field with 2/3 re-knotting:the rest is worn away.Attributed by Angela Völker to the 17th century.



272





Two fragments from a single carpet have emerged in the past few years,quite similar to the MAK carpet.They both employ elements borrowed from Vase carpets,and with elegant chi forms and palmettes.The first piece appeared at Cheflins in 2009 and was sold for $22,050.Now in Milan.




273






The second fragment was sold at Sothebys in 2014 for $37,500.




274-montage


A comparable Vase Carpet fragment is in the MET,ex-Ballard




275-MET 22.100.68


Continuing on from the Mikaeloff rug,the following was at Christies and Freeman`s with a stopover at Peter Pap.It sports the old curved Saz border.Illustrated next to a Kuba area carpet sold twice at Sothebys in 1990 and 1992.



276








Worn but distinguished by a yellow ground border.


277-Christies 25 April 2002(74)





Published by Grote-Hasenbalg in 1922,the next item is adorned with in and out palmettes,Harshang,and a nascent Afshan design,underpinned with lozenge trellis pattern-the last remnants of the spiral vine.





278




The Toms carpet was an exercise in decorum with arabesque ragged palmette border.


279-Toms sale 2



A distinguished group of Kelleh feature Nastaliq inscriptions and are frequently dated.http://www.rugtracker.com/2014/09/on-origin-of-herati-pattern.html


280-Published Pope-dated 1808



An interesting blue ground variant appeared at Christies in 2014.


281



Finally,some comparisons between Khorasan and West Persia and the Caucasus.


282-Left: Khorasan.Right:Kuba area.




283-Left:Khorasan(note Bardini-style corner solution).Right:NW Persia.



A carpet fragment sold at Rippon Boswell`s on 28 May 2011(75)for  3294€ was described as hailing from Azerbaijan,although the border has a distinct Khorasan flavour.


284




A wonderful fragment in the Baranowicz Collection has fully-fledged Harshang palmettes and a minor border filled with Armenian inscription


285




Possibly from Khorasan are some border fragments in the Museum of Ethnography,Konya.



286






A fragment published by Daniel Walker in Hali 149(76)bears a Lotus design of arresting beauty.



287




Nagel`s fragment  on a rigid lattice groundwork is a possible candidate.A second fragment is in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.



288






But we are on solid ground with an item from the James Burns Collection,published in Visions of Nature,where a small white tree is becoming Harshang.


289


















Lineage II : Iran,17th Century

82-The Tucker RGF,reverse side with lazy lines




How the commercialisation of the Emperor`s Carpets began is a mystery,but it was probably initiated from on high.A date at some point between 1550 and 1600 can be assumed.The spiritual grandeur of the animal carpets was never to be repeated,but production with aristocratic bearing was still within range.A group of carpets on silk warps and depicting golden pheasants is an immediate indication of quality,but even in later years work of the highest order was produced with humbler materials.

Sadly disfigured by old repairs,the Enzenberg carpet has an interesting 1&1/2 repeat design.Very elegant Fenghuang inhabit the fields,but the borders are strangely awkward.It is one of a group with metal brocading,gold and silver:the light areas in the palmettes are worn and tarnished metal-thread,which,combined with a great deal of corroded black,give the carpet its disturbing chroma.It was first published in the catalogue to the Vienna exhibition.


83-Thyssen-Bornemisza



84-WienerWerk,1892



A carpet fragment in the V&A also contains metal brocading(like a Polonaise),indicating a closeness to Isfahan.The Castellani carpet is a much more professional quality,as the photomontage reveals


85-V&A 721-1884



86-photomontage



Another piece of this carpet may be in store at the Benaki Museum


87-Erdmann-Viale review



Exhibited at the great Chicago Exhibition of 1926(then with Duveen),the following was advertised by Herbert Ostler on the cover of Weltkunst in 1974.It is said to have belonged to the Habsburgs,and also features silver thread brocading.





88-Weltkunst,1 October 1974



Sold at the Calatchi sale in 2000 for $97,440,this large fragment later appeared with the Textile Gallery.Described in Hali 120(125) as "cruder and messier"than the V&A piece,it nevertheless has the untrammelled quality of an early Safavid production.


89-Sothebys 4 October 2000(79)



90-Textile Gallery,Hali 143-111



A fragment from the Burns Collection(once with Kelekian)was sold at Christies in 2001 for $8225.It uses metal thread and cotton for some white areas,but the colour appears faded.Often the metal thread in such luxury items has fallen out,although one rug-legend has it that the silver and gold was extracted to mint coins!


91-Christies 18 October 2001(257)


Sold for $1,930,500 at Sothebys on 1 February 2013,the following has an illustrious provenance and is probably the finest example of an RGF with standard border.A Rothschild carpet,it had previously been sighted with Colnagi,Cittone,The Textile Gallery,and the unfortunate Roberto Calvi.It has been auctioned three times in the last twenty years,always increasing dramatically in value until finally almost reaching the 2 million dollar mark,indeed,why didn`t it?A full review can be read in Hali 175(129)A perfectly balanced design with excellent colour and condition.


92




93





94







95




A small group with strapwork border includes one blue ground rug,late of McMullan and previously Kelekian,with a scimitar like border perhaps superior to the Bacri carpets.Birds abound in the field.The carpet is ruined,with areas of bled repainting,but still magnificent.


96





97-MET,New York



Less agressive is the border on a carpet in the Gulbenkian Collection,Lisbon,one of the rare examples with a repeat design and no focal point


98




99-Gulbenkian



The Dearborn carpet,née Ford Collection.Auctioned twice,at Sothebys in 1992,and Christies in 2013,it managed to fall through both times,however was apparently purchased after sale in 1992 by Yves Mikaelov.On silk warp with birds in the field,it would have been originally at least eight metres long but is now reduced to the half(see montage)



100-The Dearborn




101-Montage



A Ballard rug in the Metropolitan(22.100.77)with pretty colouring features a simplified version of the Bacri border,and appears to have been cut.


102

103-MET 22.100.77



Acquired in 1921,the V&A`s small format piece on white silk warps exhibits a rare yellow ground border


104-Victoria and Albert museum T140-1921


The epitome of the classic Red Ground Floral style is without doubt the Wildenstein-Ojjeh carpet,now in the Islamic Museum Qatar.Once with the Wildenstein family,it was purchased by the Saudi businessman Akkram Ojjeh to furnish his ocean-going liner,the France.Ojjeh had actually acquired the entire Wildenstein Collection,but relinquished it at a monumental sale in Monte Carlo at the Sporting d`Hiver on 25-26 June 1979.Depending on one`s mood,the Wildenstein Qatar carpet could be seen as the equal of the Rothschild piece,birds or no.It has the same inner border as the McMullan blueground carpet.Sold for $1,530,014 at Christies London on 16 April 2007(100)


105



106



The Getty Sale in 1990 produced three RGF carpets.Most outstanding was a carpet which had sold previously at Parke Bernet in New York for $20,000.Ex Rockefeller,by way of Judge Gary and Duveen, this spindly old giant sold much above estimate at $99,000 and created the"Getty effect" which was to haunt salesrooms for years.The ethereal quality of a well-worn RGF with provenance would subsequently prove irresistible.


107-Sothebys NY 8 December 1990(6)





Despite having been reduced by 50% and with extensive repair,the following sold at the Clark/Corcoran sale for $209,000 to an unknown connoiseur.A photomontage shows the impeccable beauty of this carpet.




108-Sothebys 5 June 2013(3)




109-Photomontage


Two carpets chosen by Senator Clark with classic layout but varying treatment raise the questions:different time or place?They appear contemporary,but are less carefully worked than the previous example.


110-Corcoran sale Sothebys 5 June 2013(4)



111-Corcoran sale Sothebys 5 June 2013(5)


Sold at the Walters auction in 1941 with an especially complex vine-scroll border  and a very relaxed upper half 




112-Walters Sale 1941(1329)




113-Walters





First auctioned at Christies London on 19 October 1995 for £18,400 ,this well-drawn item took a dive at Bonhams in 2004 for £12,547,perhaps due to massive re-piling


114



Even more wraith-like was the carpet from Christies Elveden Hall sale


115



A later(?)but attractive piece from the Duke of Buccleuch,in a static "Karadja" style


116




Published by Erdmann,from the Heinrich Wulf Collection in Denmark,the following fragment as a photomontage


117-Wulf Collection



No complete and adequate reproduction exists of the MET`s Tucker Collection carpet,but it is a fastidious example with first rate draughtmanship


118-MET 51.177.1


The carpets in the previous section employ  a standard reversing Palmette border,which is the most common.Whatever the size,the number of palmettes across the width is alway five,interspersed with various other palmettes or minor ornaments.These carpets invariably begin and end with a halved-palmette at the field`s edge.However,a number of other borders eventually came into use.

1) The Arabesque Loop border.


119



2) Lotus border,often combined with the standard ragged-palmette.


120


3) The Lotus Palmette.This is the Palmette form often seen on Vase Carpets.


121





4) The Palmette with Cross.This is formed by a four and one design between Palmettes.


122


5) The Ragged Palmette.The most frequently occuring,in many variations.Also used on Large Medallion Ushaks.




123





124








125




The remaining border designs all feature leaf motifs.

6) Palmette and Curved Saz.The most common.





126







127




7) Overlapping Saz Leaf.


128




129






8) Straight Saz Leaf.




130

A group with more densely packed design incorporates some important pieces.

Sold at the Loges sale in 1994 the following noble wreck follows its own dramatic logic to a wild and unruly denoument.$55,890 at Sothebys 19 October 1994(239)




131





The Burnay Collection RGF in Lisbon is crammed with sinuous cloudbands, acanthus (or lotus) leaves and enterprising Palmettes.An uncommon bluegreen ground with red border and unattributed coat of arms.





132-Lisbon




Once with Cittone,and now in Qatar,the following was sold at Christies London for $189,540 in 1997.The APG in Hali 93(127)compared it unfavourably to the Rothschild example,but its star had risen somewhat when it came to be reviewed again in Hali 175(129)Silk warp and white cotton filling.


133-Christies 24 April 1997(530)



Similarity and diversity are demonstrated by the following three pieces from the Clark Collection,no doubt chosen by the Senator for their decorative harmony and sold at the warm-up Corcoran auction by Christies on 24 November 2009.


134-Lot 29-$134,500(now Farjam Coillection)


135-Lot 202-$50,000




136-Lot 130-$254,500




Published by Pope in 1939,from the Loewe Collection,with inner green and orange border


137




Finally,from the Barbara Johnson Collection,with incisive vinescrolls




138-Sothebys 15 October 2003(42)






Exquisite pieces were also produced in smaller sizes.The most beautiful of all is probably the Coimbra rug in Lisbon


139



A second carpet in Lisbon is more reticent with softer colour


140




Elegant,but with harder contours is a piece from the Kevorkian Collection sold at Sothebys in 1977


141




A little known,very pretty carpet from the Ralph Dudley Collection is in store at the MET


142




Featuring a cartouche central medallion and most elegant Lotus palmette border,the following sold at Christies London in 1999 for $48,050,and was later with Tabibnia in Milan


143





Chunky but squeezed a carpet from Kevorkian now in Tehran


144




The two following pieces were both sold at the Wildenstein-Ojjeh auction in 1979.The second was later advertised by Emir.


145





146




A perfectly drawn out and executed carpet from the Sothebys Corcoran Sale sold for $62,500


147-Corcoran sale 18




Finally an unusual piece from the Musee des Arts decoratifs with metal brocading


148



At least three large carpets are known with white or yellowground borders


149



The Eskenazi example was once in the Imperial Collection, Vienna and was auctioned after the first World War to pay for reparations.It originally had a brown-ground border,said   to have corroded,but it has probably been completely removed in the later photo.


149A




One major border not described above is the Cartouche or Tabula Ansata design,actually a category to itself.A number of RGFs are known with this design but they are too diverse to really form a group.The classic octafoil and half-cartouche form is a tri-partite design.It can be varied into unrecognition such as on the now missing Cassirer carpet,once in Berlin,which integrates large arabesque elements


150-Pope 1178


With a similar border of horizontally placed cartouches,and much favoured by Hali`s editorial team,was a rug sold at Christies in 1994


151





A rug at Williamsburg replaces the ornate arabesques with simple cloudbands and metal-thread highlights


152


Shown in Hamburg,perhaps with a cut border.



153


Sold at Lefevre in 1979 and again at Rippon Boswell`s in 1979 for $95,160 the following reconfigured carpet once in the Proehl Collection,and on a silk warp, has a simplified "Ardabil" type border


154


A small carpet in Coimbra features a central medallion forged from Split -Palmettes and mirrored in the border



155




Actually quite rare are two RGF carpets with almost identical design


156




Presumably much cut down the item from the Keir Collection with elaborate vinescrolls seems early


157




Yerkes XI is now in Tehran


158





Published in 1908 by von Scala,an item from the Tucher Collection later surfaced after the war in Amsterdam


159-von Scala,1908



160-1948



Naturally Senator Clark also owned such a carpet,in a simpler style,sold at Sothebys Corcoran auction for $137,000


161



One last piece  resides in the MAK as a fragment



162-photomontage



A further important group features a streamlining of design. The carpets become lighter and airier.Typical are three examples once with the Italian dealer Cittone,the king of RGFs.The borders also change dramatically from the old ragged palmette.


163




Also in this style is a fragment in the Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection


164




Two similar items were sold respectively at Christies in 2007( $148,00;previously sold for $159,080 in April 2000)and at the Corcoran Sale in 2013 for $281,000


165



An example in the Farjam Collection can be compared to a more densely patterned carpet in Lyons


166



A cut and joined example from the Dirksen Collection sale of 1931 features an arabesque loop border


167



Thick vinescroll bracketing dominates the field of a carpet from the Lees William Collection in Philadelphia




168



The field of a carpet from the duPont Collection published by Pope is more densely packed,and one half is squeezed into the field


169



A carpet from Danny Ghigo is dominated by stiff scrolling vines concentrated around the focal point


170



A carpet in the Poldi Pezzoli compared with a piece in the Philadelphia Museum of Art,attributed by Ellis to Agra but with 4-ply warp;many of these carpets form a central medallion "by inference"-


171




The author is still uncertain as to whether the following two pieces are similar,or the same!


172



A carpet in the Thyssen-Bornemisza collection echoes nicely the "Emperor`s" investiture Palmettes,but large Saz leaves suddenly make an appearance


173



It seems the group as a whole was swept up in "Sazmania"



174


A further development employs thick outlining,pastel colour,and much Saz and cloudband.The following example from the Clark Collection sale fetched $437,000, and was once in the Collection of Henry Marquand


175





An auction recidivist and classic of type is the "Maldonado" carpet sold at St.Cyr in 1982 with re-sales at Sothebys in 1989 and a last triumph in New York in 1998 where it brought a top-lot $112,000


176




177-Sothebys 15 April 1998(230)



Another repeat offender has been auctioned at least three times since 1993.So enamoured of it was the Hali Editorial team that it was reviewed each time.It fetched succesively 101,500(1993)$107,550(2002)and$122,500(2010),showing true investment value.


178-Sothebys 1993 and 2002,Christies 22 October 2010




From the Ojjeh sale and later Ambassador Aita,the following with a "Crossed" Palmette border and thick pastel outlines fetched $ 52,880 at Christies London on 29 April 2004


179




A carpet from the MET`s Robert Lehman Collection


180




And a pair of very similar Wildenstein-Ojjeh`s



181



Some of the most elegant smaller pieces were made in a simpler style






183



Three pieces were once with Vitali Benguiat


184




A piece sold at Christies can be compared to a rug in the Boston Fine Arts Museum


185




Or a carpet at Coimbra lined up against a simpler model from Sothebys


186





Two close relatives at the Clark Sale featured exquisite Lotus Palmettes obviously influenced by the LaFoes Carpet


187



But two rugs from the Ballard and Keir Collections appear "wrong" respectively


188



A number of medallion carpets are known,starting with a large piece in the Gulbenkian Museum


189





Sold at Sothebys on 11 October 2004(68)the following hithertoo unknown carpet contained metal-thread brocading,alas poorly repaired,but still managed a hefty $111,000



190




191




Another rug with metal-thread(and cotton highlights)was sold at Christies in 2014 from the estate of Barbara Johnson,and represents a kind of RGF-Polonaise hybrid($139,025)


192


The crossover also worked in reverse,with some silk Polonaise carpets imitating the RGFs



193-Bernheimer


An unusual carpet with allover medallion and Saz from the Getty Museum,and later with Yves Mikaeloff,was sold for $77,000 at Sothebys in September 1991,but fell through at Christies in 2013.Perhaps it was too worn out?Such carpets should rarely be wet-cleaned.


194-Christies 8 October 2013(127)




A frequently illustrated carpet from the Thyssen collection has exceptionally symmetrical drawing,perhaps too even to be a really old piece.The medallion formed with split palmettes and two curious"fat parrots" at the start of the field.


195



An old face at the auctions is Sothebys 2004 fragment


196



A few examples exist with rounded medallions.Starting with the best of the Lehman Collection,a carpet illustrated by Pope when it was with French & Co.


197



Sold at Christies London in 1988 for $49,368, a rare near perfect condition rug with an early looking medallion;and a very small(86 x 107 cms) Indian influenced ruglet which brought $34,500 at Sothebys New York in 1998(after its apparent pair had fetched just 1000 pounds at a small London sale!)



198

One group of carpets has received extensive attention far beyond their actual occurence.They feature acanthus leaves and saz and stem from a standardised model.Perhaps the earliest of thee carpets still retains its chinese cloudbands,and has been a frequent visitor to the salesrooms over the years,starting in 1903 at the Marquand Sale,then at the Benguiats Auction of 1925.In our time at Sothebys London in 1976(30.000 pounds),then from the British rail pension Fund(!),Sothebys 1996(133,500 pounds)and finally at Christies London in 2007 where it brought 180,000 pounds($357,480)


199-The Marquand 






A classic example in the simpler style is the Altman carpet in the MET.


200



One of two Getty carpets with this design features an arabesque loop border and was once in the Mortimer Schiff Collection.Sold at Sothebys New York on 8 December 1990(5) for $ 82,500.


201





A pair to this carpet was offered at Sothebys in 1976


202-Sothebys 4 April 1976(54)

A second Getty carpet was sold for $121,000 at Sothebys in 1990.Carpets withis design were likely to have been the forerunners of the "Herati" design. See: http://www.rugtracker.com/2014/09/on-origin-of-herati-pattern.html



203




A carpet from the Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection.



204




Three further examples.


205-AAA 1914(303)





206-Lefevre 16 May 1975(10)




207-Christies 3 May 2001(121)



A last example with cartouche border,the Holms Hepburn,was used a number of times at Coronations.Sold for $134,555 at Lyon & Turnbull in 2014.Unsold at Sothebys in 2015.



208







A last coherent group in Saz style begins with the swashbuckling LaFoes carpet of Senator Clark,sold at the  Corcoran Sale for $4,645,00 on 5 June 2013 in New York.


209-Corcoran 19




210

211

212

213



Since the Corcoran/Clark sale the Duke of Braganza has become a household name in rug circles.He must have had a vast collection!At least according to Vitali Benguiat,from whom the following carpets issued,one to Thyssen,the other to Edsel Ford.


214-Thyssen-Bornemisza

215-Ford



A denser style was in evidence at the 2009 Corcoran/Clarks sale,to which can also be added a carpet once belonging to Lady Dudley(also via Benguiat)and now in Tehran


216-Christies 24.11.2009(129)-$254,500

217-Christies 24.11.2009(205)-$158,500

218-Christies 24.11.2009(31)$170,500



219-M `Lady Dudley



A finer and denser style was achieved in three pieces.A carpet once with Judge Gary and now in Tehran


220



The Tabbagh carpet which went to Moshe Tabibnia in Milan via C.John




221-Milestones 21



And a virtually unknown piece in the Victoria and Albert Museum London


222-V&A 12-1886


A group of large carpet with a ragged palmette and straight Saz border are said by some to be Indian.There are two types:an overall Saz design,and a multi-quatrefoil medallion.


Two carpets are very similar.The Bausback Carpet is said to be from our old friend the Duke of Braganza,the other belonged to Sir Herbert Wernher,and was the settlement of a gambling debt.(sold Sothebys London 11 October 1990-735- for $32,175)


223


A carpet in the Met`s Lehman Collection includes curved Saz in the borders.



224-Lehman Collection  



Another carpet from Luton Hoo was sold at Christies London on 26 April 1990(106)


225-Christies 1990



The best three carpets with allover medallion are as follows.


226-Lisbon



227-Farjam Collection




228-Johnson Collection Sothebys 15 March 2003(40)






As ever,cut and reduced items make excellent furnishing items,beloved of decorators for their handy sizes,invariably recycled for their beauty and poise


229-Rippon Boswell 20 May 2000(156)

230-Christies 8 October 2013(98)-12,500 pounds

231-Artcurial 20 June 2012(341)-$109,550

232-Fletcher Collection,MET

233-Corcoran/Clark Sothebys 5 June 2013-$28,125

234-Alex Zadah



A group of individually designed carpets concludes this review.They are all in the large kelleh format,chiefly with arabesque designs,and seem not to have been collated.Their closest relatives are the carpets with strapwork fields,such as at Jaipur,and indeed an example sold at the 2009 Christies/Corcoran for $122,500.


235-Christies 24 November 2009(133)



Another splendid example is in the MET,ex Kevorkian.


236-MET 69.244



An example at Boughton House.


237



A fragment in Montreal.


238



The  fabulous Widener carpet

239




A fragment from the David Sylvester Collection with the same border


240-Sylvester Sale(85)




A medallion carpet sold at Christies in 1993 for $30,430,with a very similar piece from Martin,1908(published in Hendley)


241-Christies 1993

242-Martin-Hendley


A Vienna war casualty burnt in 1945; published in Sarre-Trenkwald.



243



A marvellous carpet in the Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon.


244




Of which another two fragmented examples are recorded.




245-Benguiat 1925




246-Ettinghausen








Three fragments conclude this part of the survey, a shard from a vaporised Berlin carpet,and an item once belonging to Kelekian.





247-Berlin,note grinning skull



248



At the time of writing an interesting fragment appeared at auction,with blue ground,which surely belongs here.


248a-Rippon Boswell 13 June 2015(75)



249-Ferdinand Bol