A PEKING CARPET
A PEKING CARPET
A PEKING CARPET
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A PEKING CARPET
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A PEKING CARPET

NORTH CHINA, CIRCA 1900

Details
A PEKING CARPET
NORTH CHINA, CIRCA 1900
Full pile throughout, scattered minute surface marks and touches of moth damage, selvages replaced, otherwise very good condition
10ft. x 6ft.7in. (305cm. x 201cm.)
Provenance
The Manolo March Collection from Son Galceran, Mallorca, Christie's, London, 28-29 October 2009, lot 579

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Sara Plumbly
Sara Plumbly Director, Head of Department

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Lot Essay


The border design of the present carpet comprises a series of cartouche panels each filled with one of the Chinese 'Hundred Antique' motifs. Originally the symbols were seen as a visible manifestation of Confucianism which was developed by the Chinese philosopher, Confucius, (551–479 BCE) and which later became known as the 'Hundred Schools of Thought'. By the second half of the eighteenth century, and certainly by the nineteenth century, the individual motifs became increasingly reduced in scale, their philosophical importance having become less important. A version of the present border can be found on a carpet in L. Larsson, Carpets from China, Xinjiang & Tibet, London, 1988, p.32, fig. 27.

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