A NORTH WEST ANATOLIAN RUG

18TH CENTURY

Details
A NORTH WEST ANATOLIAN RUG
18TH CENTURY
The shaded indigo field with six rows of three indigo, apricot, sea-blue, brick-red and charcoal-grey hexagonal medallions containing hooked quartered lozenges, the hexagons divided by hooked bars, three sides with burnt orange and blue striped bands, the fourth side with a blue kilim finish, heavily corroded black, holed in places, very slight repiling resulting in colour run, the holes backed
6ft.3in. x 3ft.2in. (191cm. x 96.5cm.)
Warp: wool, ivory, Z2S
Weft: wool, brown, Z1; 4 shoots
Pile: wool, Z2; symmetric, H25 x V22, pile height max 6mm

Lot Essay

This fragment is one of a small number of closely related pieces, the first of which, from the Turk ve Islam Museum, was published by Erdmann as being from 'Anatolia, sixteenth to eighteenth century' (Erdmann, K.: Seven Hundred Years of Oriental Carpets, London, 1970, pl.121, p.106). A small number of further examples have subsequently been published, most notably two complete examples with Lefevre, London (29 November 1974; and the 4 February 1977 sale of Turkish Carpets, lot 1). Other fragments include one shown by Sailer in 1988 (Sailer, F.: Textile Fragmente, Salzburg, 1988; 'West Anatolia, 18th century or earlier') and one in a private Austrian Collection attributed to West Anatolia, 18th century (Antique Oriental Carpets from Austrian Collections, Vienna, 1986, no.16). One of the characteristic features is the offset knotting used to get the correct angles within the design.

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