Page 259 - ART OF THE ISLAMIC AND INDIAN WORLDS Carpets, Ceramics Objects, Christie's London Oct..27, 2022
P. 259

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 AN IMPRESSIVE LARGE SILK KOUM KAPI
 CARPET
 ISTANBUL, TURKEY, EARLY 20TH CENTURY
 Of 'Garden' design, full pile throughout, overall
 excellent condition
 15ft.5in. x 10ft.6in. (475cm. x 325cm.)
 £70,000-90,000  US$81,000-100,000
 €81,000-100,000
 The knot count measures approximately 9V x 9H
 per cm. sq.

 The famed 'garden' design, with its portrayal of
 flowers, trees and other vegetation often with
 a central fountain, is one of a large number of
 seventeenth century designs created in South East
 Persia which travelled to the North West of the
 country in the eighteenth century. The prototype
 of the design is found in a carpet woven in the
 'vase' technique in the royal collection in Jaipur,
 Rajasthan. Alberto Levi suggests that this migration
 of design could have been due to the social and
 political upheavals experienced at the beginning of
 the 18th century in Persia, which may have forced
 weavers from Kirman to relocate to Kurdistan
 and Azerbaijan, "Renewal and Innovation, HALI,
 Issue 70, pp.84-95. Both Kurt Erdmann (Seven
 Hundred Years of Oriental Carpets, London, 1970,
 pp.66-70) and Christine Klose ("Betrachtungen
 zu nordwestpersischen Gartenteppichen des 18.
 Jahrhunderts", HALI, vol.1, no.2, (1978), p.114) discuss
 the development of the group.

 This design continues to be used throughout the
 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries within various
 weaving capitals along the silk route with various
 stylistic changes, mainly being a simplification
 of the motifs. The present carpet is one of the
 later examples in the development, typified by the
 simplified rendering of the trees and an absence
 of the pool medallions.
 Although this finely woven silk carpet is unsigned,
 the quality of weave, design and the intricate
 patterning suggest that this carpet was produced
 by one of the great masters of the Armenian
 'Koum Kapi' workshops in Istanbul.











 256  In addition to the hammer price, a Buyer’s Premium (plus VAT) is payable. Other taxes and/or an Artist Resale Royalty    257
 fee are also payable if the lot has a tax or λ symbol. Check Section D of the Conditions of Sale at the back of this catalogue.
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