Antique Rugs & Antique Carpets
Oriental Rugs by Wayne Mattox
Of all antique categories, Oriental Rugs,
may be the most mysterious. If you are lucky enough to visit an
antique auction offering a good selection old estate carpets
you will also notice a large flock of gentlemen, many of them
Persians, inspecting these lots during "preview." They are
known in the trade as "the Rug Dealers." Please note that
I intend no malice or indignation here. Painting dealers with
their silly price books and furniture dealers who spend more
time on their backs than auto mechanics, and all the other
specialists have their own peculiarities as well. It's one of
the things that makes this business fun.
Rug dealers will kick rugs. They will
grab their hair in disgust and cry out about every tiny flaw
that can be found, and a few that can't. Words will be tossed
around that will be as common to your ear as ancient
Greek-words like Shirvan, Baluchi, Kenareh, and Ghiordes knot.
The Rug Dealers will turn the rugs over and bend down to
inspect the tiny knots from underneath. Then, when the auction
commences and the oriental carpets come up for sale, they will
bid. Usually one at a time. Grudgingly. Some of the bidders
will appear as if their heart is failing when outrageous levels
are seemingly reached. Levels where only a rich and crazy third
generation carpet virtuoso the would compete. Now, would you
dare to bid against such a man. I think not.
A well chosen and placed oriental rug
will enhance any home or apartment. They are available in a
wide variety of color, size, texture, and price. Artistic
pre-1930 hand-tied carpets in good condition are expensive and
worth the price. A room sized rug may have taken months for
weaver and her children to complete.
Employing knotting, materials, colors,
and design as criteria, early hand-woven carpets are normally
categorized as to their probable geographic origin. New rugs,
which may be hand-tied or machine woven, are assigned to the
land that inspired their design. For instance, a "Caucasian
Carpet" (From what is now generally Southern Russian) produced
by nomads from old region of "Kazak" (SW of the Caspian Sea)
might have 40 Ghiordes knots per square inch (a loose weave),
vibrant colors including green, red, blue, yellow, ivory, and
brown, and highly "geometric" design elements. That's not
important for you to know. What is important is that Caucasian
rugs harmonize with both American Colonial and modernistic
design. Rugs from China look good in Arts & Crafts
settings. Persian carpets compliment Victorian and formal
settings.
It is not easy to discern hand-woven rugs
from machine made. As a general rule, look for obvious signs of
age, vibrancy and earthiness in color, and artistic
inconsistencies in weave and design. Fortunately, many machine
woven carpets are also labeled as such underneath. If you can
discern quality and age in paintings you are well on your way
to understanding rugs.
When Milton contemplated the exotic world
from where the "orient sun" rises, in "Paradise Lost" he might
well have been standing on one of the luxurious carpets that
found its way to Europe in the 17th century. For half the
world, oriental rugs have been part of our culture for over
2,000 years. It is a highly developed art-form.
Reprinted with permission
by AntiqueTalk.com
Copyright by Wayne Mattox ©
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