A MEDALLION USHAK CARPET
A MEDALLION USHAK CARPET

WEST ANATOLIA, LATE 17TH CENTURY

Details
A MEDALLION USHAK CARPET
WEST ANATOLIA, LATE 17TH CENTURY
The shaded brick-red field with blue palmette vine around a polygonal indigo medallion with dark green flaming surround containing palmette tendrils and arabesques around a shaded red quatrofoil centrepiece containing similar motifs outlined by golden yellow arabesques, mid-green and dark green pendants above and below, the corners with four part sea-green panelled medallions containing arabesques and palmette vine, in a royal blue broad border of palmette tendrils meandering around larger palmettes between light blue and brick-red angular floral and leafy meander stripes, ends rewoven, areas of repiling
17ft.5in. x 9ft.10in. (530cm. x 299cm.)

Lot Essay

This is an example of the classic Medallion Ushak type. The basic design principal has a red field with delicate floral tracery and a large indigo primary medallion flanked by lobed medallions all filled with split-leaf rumi and angular floral vinery. The earliest and best examples of these carpets were woven for the wealthy Ottoman home market. Medallion Ushak carpets however already appeared in European paintings during the sixteenth century with examples being depicted by artists such as Velasquez, Zurbaran and Vermeer (King, Donald and Sylvester, David: The Eastern Carpet in the Western World from the 15th to the 17th Century, London, 1983, p.73). By the 17th century there is evidence of a substantial export market in Europe, both from textual sources and from the number which have survived in large European country houses.

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