AN IMPRESSIVE LARGE SAFAVID ISFAHAN CARPET
AN IMPRESSIVE LARGE SAFAVID ISFAHAN CARPET
AN IMPRESSIVE LARGE SAFAVID ISFAHAN CARPET
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AN IMPRESSIVE LARGE SAFAVID ISFAHAN CARPET
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PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE COLLECTION
AN IMPRESSIVE LARGE SAFAVID ISFAHAN CARPET

CENTRAL PERSIA, 17TH CENTURY

細節
AN IMPRESSIVE LARGE SAFAVID ISFAHAN CARPET
CENTRAL PERSIA, 17TH CENTURY
Uneven areas of wear, scattered old restoration, lined, selvages and ends overbound
32ft. x 12ft. (975cm. x 366cm.)
來源
Duke Don Gaetano de Braganza, Fourth Duke of Lafões (1856-1927), Italy
Senator William A. Clark, New York
'500 Years: Decorative Arts Europe', Christie's New York, 24 November 2009, lot 133
出版
Illustrated Handbook of The W.A. Clark Collection, Washington, D.C., 1928, p. 74.
'Carpets for the Great Shah', The Corcoran Gallery of Art Bulletin, Vol 2, No. 1, October 1948, p. 20, no. P29.
更多詳情
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. 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.

榮譽呈獻

Phoebe Jowett Smith
Phoebe Jowett Smith Department Coordinator

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Significantly, the present lot and the following two Isfahan carpets in the collection are with Portuguese royal or noble provenance. Jessica Hallett's article gives us a clearer understanding of the development of Isfahan carpet design over the 17th century, and bases her conclusions principally on Portuguese inventory records, which are supported by paintings (Jessica Hallett, 'From the Looms of Yazd and Isfahan', in Carpets and Textiles in the Iranian World, 1400-1700, Oxford and Genoa 2010, pp.90-123). Following Hallett’s proposed chronology, the Lafões provenance – the Dukedom was granted in 1718 by King João V to the illegitimate descendants of his father, King Pedro II – which may imply a late 17th or even early 18th century date of manufacture/importation. The documents also suggest that, large quantities of carpets were imported by the Portuguese from the central Persian carpet weaving centre of Yazd (J. Hallett, op.cit. pp.90-123).

The exuberant scrolling vine in our carpet relates to a variant group of 'Strapwork' design which is discussed in greater detail in relation to lot 178 in the present sale. More unusual still, are the petal-like spandrels, which one would expect to find reflected in a complete central medallion. Instead, the central element is a small lozenge with opposing palmettes at both sides and the field is comprised of large split-leaf arabesques. A closely related Isfahan carpet with a comparable field design of exuberant scrolling arabesques, with the same palmette and leaf vine border, is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, (acc. no.69.244).

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