A SILK HERIZ RUG
A SILK HERIZ RUG
A SILK HERIZ RUG
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A SILK HERIZ RUG
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SULTANS OF SILK: THE GEORGE FARROW COLLECTION
A SILK HERIZ RUG

NORTH WEST PERSIA, CIRCA 1850

Details
A SILK HERIZ RUG
NORTH WEST PERSIA, CIRCA 1850
Of 'waq-waq' design, light even wear, minor restorations
5ft.11in. x 4ft.6in. (180cm. x 136cm.)
Provenance
With George Farrow by 1993
Further Details
Some countries prohibit or restrict the purchase and/or import of Iranian-origin property. Bidders must familiarise themselves with any laws or shipping restrictions that apply to them before bidding on these lots. For example, the USA prohibits dealings in and import of Iranian-origin “works of conventional craftsmanship” (such as carpets, textiles, decorative objects, and scientific instruments) without an appropriate licence. Christie’s has a general OFAC licence which, subject to compliance with certain conditions, would enable a buyer to import this type of lot into the USA. If you intend to use Christie’s licence, please contact us for further information before you bid.

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Sara Plumbly Director, Head of Department

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Lot Essay


The knot count measures approximately 10V x 7H knots per cm. sq.

The source of the waq waq design, or 'talking tree', which completely fills the field of the present rug, stems from a legend of Alexander the Great and was a familiar subject of Persian and Indian miniature painting inspired by earlier manuscripts that circulated in regions across present-day Turkey to India in the fifteenth–seventeenth centuries, as seen in 'A Floral Fantasy', Mughal India, early 1600's, Cleveland Museum of Art, (acc. 2013.319). The plant produces life in myriad forms, with branches blossoming into the heads of animals or birds, including lions, tigers, rams, and dragons. Painted with naturalistic features, yet uncanny through their coexistence, their representation, in profile as well as through aerial views, lends a surreal quality to the work. George Farrow had a small number of pictorial rugs in his collection including, lot 198, a silk Heriz with an even more elaborate and fantastical waq-waq design.

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