AN AZERBAIJAN SILK EMBROIDERY
AN AZERBAIJAN SILK EMBROIDERY
AN AZERBAIJAN SILK EMBROIDERY
AN AZERBAIJAN SILK EMBROIDERY
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PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE CANADIAN COLLECTOR
AN AZERBAIJAN SILK EMBROIDERY

SOUTH CAUCASUS, 18TH CENTURY

Details
AN AZERBAIJAN SILK EMBROIDERY
SOUTH CAUCASUS, 18TH CENTURY
Worked in running stitch and satin stitch, corroded dark brown, localised wear, backed and mounted
3ft.3in. x 1ft.10in. (100cm. x 54cm.)
Sale room notice
Please note that the lot is being offered without reserve.

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Sara Plumbly
Sara Plumbly Director, Head of Department

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Lot Essay


The design of this embroidery is filled with the design vernacular of earlier seventeenth and eighteenth century Caucasian embroideries and pile carpets. It is dominated by the large centralised octagon that spans the width of the central field. Above the upper end panel there is the inclusion of a further octagon and part-octagons at each corner, suggesting that the design was intended as an endless repeat. A comparable embroidery, formerly part of the collection of Eugene Chesrow, displays a similar design with horizontal panels above and below a dominant centralised stellar medallion with further part medallions above and below, (Sotheby's New York, 31 January 2014, lot 5). An eighteenth century embroidery of wider proportions and 2:1:2 formation, in the Bruce P. and Olive W. Baganz Collection, displays similar hooked ram's horn appendages that are positioned on the points of the compass within the central red medallion, (Malin Lonnberg, 'Azerbaijan silk embroidery', HALI, Issue 204, p.32).

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