Page 271 - ART OF THE ISLAMIC AND INDIAN WORLDS Carpets, Ceramics Objects, Christie's London Oct..27, 2022
P. 271

■ 259
          A KHORASAN KELLEH
          NORTH EAST PERSIA, EARLY 19TH
          CENTURY
          Extensive areas of repair and repiling, sides and
          ends secured
          16ft.10in. x 7ft.8in. (512cm. X 234cm.)
          £7,000-9,000        US$8,200-11,000
                                €8,100-10,000

          PROVENANCE:
          Otto Bernheimer, acquired 9th August 1937, as a
          'Herat'
          The Bernheimer Family Collection of Carpets,
          Christie's, London, 14 February 1996, lot 4
          In Persia from the middle of the 18th century
          and through the first half of the 19th, carpets
          with overall designs were hugely popular, at the
          expense of centralised or more complex animal
          designs. This is very clearly shown in surviving
          paintings from the post-Safavid period where
          almost every carpet depicted is a kelleh with
          overall floral lattice of one sort or another (see
          for example Layla S.Diba and Maryam Ekhtiar,
          Royal Persian Paintings, the Qajar Epoch, New
          York, 1999, nos.26-28, 31, 47 and 57). Some of
          the designs in paintings are recognisable but
          most are generic, and most represent carpets of
          Afshan, Harshang, Herati and related patterns.
          There is not enough visual information depicted
          to enable us to tie up surviving carpets with those
          in the paintings. For this reason a small number
          of Khorasan carpets with inscription cartouches
          containing verses almost hidden within the
          field, at least two of which have credible dates
          of 1218/1803-4 and 1223/1808-9 are very
          important to our understanding (The Bernheimer
          Family Collection of Carpets, Christie's London,
          14 February 1996, lot 60; Arthur Upham Pope,
 258      A Survey of Persian Art, Oxford, 1938, pl.1272A).
          While each of those have a harshang design field,
          in most other respects they are very similar to
 257
          the present carpet. The wool and colours are very
 256
          similar both in the field and the border, while the
          guard stripes are virtually identical.
 ■*256  ■*257  ■*258
 A SARAB RUNNER  A SARAB RUNNER  A BAKSHAISH RUNNER
 WEST PERSIA, CIRCA 1890  WEST PERSIA, CIRCA 1880  WEST PERSIA, CIRCA 1900
 Light localised wear with some minor repairs,   Overall excellent condition  Overall excellent condition
 overall good condition  17ft. 10in. x 3ft.6in. (544cm. x 107cm.)  14ft.3in. x 2ft.8in. (435cm. x 82cm.)
 18ft.8in. x 3ft.3in. (570cm. x 99cm.)
 £3,500-5,000  US$4,100-5,800  £3,000-5,000  US$3,500-5,800
 £3,000-4,000  US$3,600-4,700  €4,100-5,800  €3,500-5,800
 €3,500-4,600

 268  In addition to the hammer price, a Buyer’s Premium (plus VAT) is payable. Other taxes and/or an Artist Resale Royalty    269
 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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