AN OTTOMAN SILK VELVET AND METAL-THREAD PANEL
AN OTTOMAN SILK VELVET AND METAL-THREAD PANEL

BURSA, TURKEY, 17TH CENTURY

Details
AN OTTOMAN SILK VELVET AND METAL-THREAD PANEL
BURSA, TURKEY, 17TH CENTURY
Of rectangular form, composed of two loom widths joined at the centre, the red velvet ground woven with stepped rows of bold cintamani roundels containing carnations, a rectangular double band around the centre and edge of the panel, metal-thread worn, mounted
64¾ x 47in. (164.5 x 119.3cm.)

Brought to you by

Andrew Butler-Wheelhouse
Andrew Butler-Wheelhouse

Lot Essay

According to Nurhan Atasoy the design of repeating roundels deriving from cintamani form were a mainstay of Bursa weaving design of the 17th century (Nurhan Atasoy, Walter B. Denny, Louise W. Mackie and Hülya Tezcan, Ipek, The Crescent and the Rose, Imperial Ottoman Silks and Velvets, London and Istanbul, 2001, pl. 93). A cushion cover in a private collection has a very similar repeated çintamani design and is attributed to 17th century (Nurhan Atasoy, Walter B. Denny, Louise W. Mackie and Hülya Tezcan, op.cit, London and Istanbul, 2001, pp.320-21, fig.365).

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