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Home > Auction >  Art of the Islamic and Indian Worlds including Oriental Rugs and Carpets >  Lot.227 A 'COMPARTMENT' CARPET FRAGMENT PROBABLY DAMASCUS, SYRIA, SE...

LOT 227 A 'COMPARTMENT' CARPET FRAGMENT PROBABLY DAMASCUS, SYRIA, SE...

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GBP25,000
Estimate  GBP  25,000 ~ 35,000

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Art of the Islamic and Indian Worlds including Oriental Rugs and Carpets

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A 'COMPARTMENT' CARPET FRAGMENTPROBABLY DAMASCUS, SYRIA, SECOND HALF 16TH CENTURYA 'COMPARTMENT' CARPET FRAGMENTPROBABLY DAMASCUS, SYRIA, SECOND HALF 16TH CENTURYComprising several sections of border and field, localised repairs, lined6ft.10in. x 4ft.5in. (209cm. x 135cm.)The attribution of the 'compartment' rugs to Syria is one that dates back a considerable time. In 1909 Konsul Bernheimer bought his example (sold in these Rooms, 14 February 1996, lot 27) as an "alter syrischer Teppich". Yet this attribution is far from certain. While the group has a clear homogeneity within itself, its combination of technical structure and design motifs make it very difficult to place. Egypt, Rhodes, the Adana plain and East Anatolia have all been proposed. The subject is discussed at length in various places, the fullest of which are R. Pinner and M.Franses, 'The Eastern Mediterranean Carpet Collection in the Victoria and Albert Museum', HALI vol.4, no.1, pp.37-52 and F. Spuhler, 'Chessboard Rugs', in Oriental Carpet & Textile Studies II, London, 1986, pp.261-269. The development of many of the motifs from the Mamluk carpets of the 15th century is clear. The continuous knot small medallion surrounded by inverted or radiating motifs is easy to parallel and the balance of colours, although slightly different in hue, gives a very similar overall effect. The structural analysis is however completely different, in particular in the way the wool here is given a 'Z' ply rather than the typical 'S' of the products of Egypt. A linking piece is a rug of the same structure as the present carpet from the so-called Para-Mamluk group, formerly in the Pietro Barbieri collection, which has the same field panels as are found here but arranged in a classic 2-1-2 formation, the central panel having a larger version of the design than the spandrels (M. and V. Viale, Arazzi e Tappeti Antichi, Turin, 1952, pl.150). An attribution to Turkey however must also be discounted since the carpets are knotted with an asymmetric knot open to the left in the same way as the Mamluk carpets but contrasting strongly with the symmetric Turkish knot. Most of the group shows field designs that are variants of that seen here. It is generally thought that most of those with larger central panels set within octagons, the corners filled with small triangles, antedate the more typical hexagonal panelled field as seen here. Other field designs are occasionally encountered, such as the overall cloudband design of Persian influence in Berlin (F. Spuhler, Oriental Carpets in the Museum of Islamic Art, Berlin, London, 1987, p.66. no.73 and pl.216), the related example in the Vakiflar Museum (B. Balpinar and B. Hirsch, Carpets of the Vakiflar Museum, Istanbul, Wesel, 1988, p.130 and pl.59), one in the Keir Collection which shows the influence of the North West Persian medallion carpets (F. Spuhler, Islamic Carpets and Textiles in the Keir Collection, London, 1978, no.40, pp.78-79), another that appeared on the London and New York markets with overall palmette vine (HALI, Issue 71, October/November 1993, p.100) which relates to two fragments in the Keir Collection (F. Spuhler, op. cit., no.39, p.77), and one of clear Ottoman design also in the Vakiflar Museum, Istanbul (B. Balpinar, and B. Hirsch, op. cit., p.128 and pl.58). Of the vast majority that have fields almost identical to that seen here, all the small examples (mostly with 3 x 2 medallions) share an identical standard border. Of the largest examples only one has the standard border; the others have differing more complex designs. It is particularly in these border designs that the relationship between the larger carpets with the standard field and those with field variants can be linked. The present carpet is a case in point; its border of addorsed serrated split-palmettes, linked by a meandering angular leafy vine, shares the same design elements as the second of the two carpets in the Vakiflar Museum mentioned above. The same border elements are also found in two other carpets in the same collection (B. Belkis and B. Balpinar, op. cit., pls.60 and 61). Both the last two carpets are symmetrically knotted and are ascribed by the authors to Syria or south eastern Anatolia.One of the most impressive carpets from this group is in the Al Sabah collection, Kuwait, which was bought in these Rooms, 17 October, lot 417. Comprising fifteen hexagons, arranged in rows of three by five, the field is enclosed within a strikingly similar border to the present lot; the colouring in the border however is altered so that the addorsed arabesques are light yellow rather than red as in the present lot. In his note on the present fragment, Martin Volkmann points out that a detail of another carpet was published by F. Sarre in the 1908 supplement to the "Wiener Werk". It is probable that that carpet, which is now in a private European collection was part of a larger but reduced carpet sold from the estate of Mrs. Harry H. Blum, Sotheby's New York, 1 May 1982, lot 295. Both have the same border design but are woven in a counterposed palette where the arabesques are woven in blue on a red ground and the related but more complex field design of different sizes of radiating roundels and quartered lozenges is on a camel-brown ground. Despite the fragmentary state of the present carpet original parts of the ivory cintamani and ‘s’ motif outer guard stripe remain, which appears to be unique amongst this group. The elegantly drawn border and field, much of which retains a lively sense of colour, suggest that it would once have been part of an important carpet from a rare group whose origin continues to be widely speculated.细节 A COMPARTMENT CARPET FRAGMENTPROBABLY DAMASCUS, SYRIA, SECOND HALF 16TH CENTURYComprising several sections of border and field, localised repairs, lined6ft.10in. x 4ft.5in. (209cm. x 135cm.) 来源 With Hans Purrmann, Germany, until 1966German Private Collection, thence by descent 出版 M. Volkmann, Alte Orientteppiche -- Ausgewählte Stücke deutscher Privatsammlungen, Munich, 1985, no.5, pp.24-25 注意事项 This lot will be removed to Christie’s Park Royal. Christie’swill inform you if the lot has been sent offsite. Our removal and storage of the lot is subject to the terms and conditions of storage which can be found at Christies.com/storage and our fees for storageare set out in the table below - these will apply whether the lot remains with Christie’s or is removed elsewhere.Please call Christie’s Client Service 24 hours in advance to book a collection time at Christie’s Park Royal. All collections from Christie’s Park Royal will be by pre-booked appointment only.Tel: +44 (0)20 7839 9060Email: cscollectionsuk@christies.com.If the lot remains at Christie’s it will be available for collection on any working day 9.00 am to 5.00 pm.Lots are not available for collection at weekends. This lot has been imported from outside of the UK for sale and placed under the Temporary Admission regime. Import VAT is payable at 5% on the hammer price. VAT at 20% will be added to the buyer’s premium but will not be shown separately on our invoice.

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