Threads of History
By Sarah E. Fensom
November 2010
THE COLORFUL PATTERNS OF ANTIQUE ORIENTAL RUGS TELL TALES THAT TODAY'S ENTHUSIASTS DECODE.
In 1932, a New York
engineer, Arthur
Arwine, artfully
recreated the plush
atmosphere of a
Turkmen yurt in
his Sheridan
Square apartment by draping colorful carpets on his walls,
his furniture and, of course, his floors. This
urban hideaway became the meetinghouse
for Arwine and a few friends– Anton Lau,
a fellow engineer; friends in the film industry,
Roy Winton and Arthur Gale; and
a scholar and dealer, Arthur Dilley–to
discuss all aspects of their common obsession,
oriental rugs. The group, who dubbed
themselves the Hajji Baba club, after the
hero of an early 19th-century English
novel about Persia, quickly attracted more
members who shared their enthusiasm
for collecting in a field that had been quietly
gaining steam in Europe and America
since the mid-19th century. Today the
club, as president emeritus Kurt Munkacsi
reports, boasts around 200 international
members–a number indicative of the passionate
yet exclusive crowd one might find
oneself among when endeavoring to amass
a cache of fine-art-level carpets.
The current market for oriental rugs can be
broken down neatly into two parts: decorative
and collectible. The former is larger
and caters to those who buy rugs, essentially,
to cover the floors in their homes.
"For those using rugs simply to decorate
there are certain trends that go in and out
of style–like fashion. Often color has a
big part in this," says Sumru Belger Krody,
Head curator of the Textile Museum
in Washington, D.C. In this category, aesthetics
are the main draw, and though buyers
might spring for a very fine carpet, it
is look, color, or size that drive them to
choose one piece over another.
The collectible market is smaller in size
but greater in enthusiasm. It is sustained
by those who collect rugs for various reasons–
perhaps on the basis of region, time
period, tribe or the like–but with the intent
to acquire and display their rugs as pieces
of art. Hadji Rahimipour, vice president
of Bonhams' carpets and rugs department,
explains that he judges fine-art quality carpets
according to four features: origin, age,
quality of workmanship and condition.
"Carpets are not like paintings, which you
can't touch or get too close to," he says.
"Carpets go on the floor–that's the beauty
of the old rugs."
On the other hand, this traditional placement
of carpets–on the floor and underfoot–
is to some a stigma that keeps the
genre from ranking alongside other pieces
of fine or decorative art. Peter Poullada, a
San Francisco-based independent scholar
and collector, says, "One reason these rugs
are undervalued is that they are on the
floor. The natural tendency is to think that
they can't be that great if they are lying on
the floor, even if a carpet is more valuable
than the Georgian chest sitting on top of it.
If you can get a rug off the floor and look
at it and judge it on aesthetic grounds, then
you've won a victory."
Poullada adds that the analogy between
carpets and artworks breaks down somewhat
because "we can't celebrate the artist."
But for hard-core collectors, the anonymity
of Middle Eastern weavers is no
drawback but actually a large part of the
interest. What makes each rug one of a
kind is the cultural context in which it was
created, and this context has a large bearing on style, colors and, consequently, collectibility.
The most sought after rugs in
today's collector market are tribal rugs–
those woven by nomadic peoples in Central
Asia, Iran, Afghanistan and elsewhere–
and these are the most geometrical and abstract
in their designs.
Jan David Winitz, president of the Claremont
Rug Company in Oakland, Calif.,
describes tribal rugs as "pieces of true folk
art." Beautiful as they are, their geometric
patterns were not created solely for aesthetic
purposes, but recall a symbolic language
that was used among tribes. Munkacsi
says, "Once you get into the textiles and
rugs you get completely wrapped up in the
history of Asia. I like the Turkmen geometric
rugs; the different patterns are totems
of different tribes, and when one tribe took
over another the totems change slightly."
The designs and knots of these tribal rugs
are so distinctive, says Rahimipour, that
"sometimes we'll turn a rug over and see
a different type of knot beings used–we
eventually realized that someone from another
tribe must have been visiting. There
was no other way to explain it."
Village rugs, according to Winitz, are
more of a "cottage industry" whose manufacture
was "an event" for an entire village.
The men raised and herded sheep, while
the women hand-dyed the wool using allnatural
dyes and wove the carpets on giant
looms. Elisabeth Parker, the head of Christie's
rugs and carpets department, describes
the production of these textiles as a "women's
industry." She explains, "The men
of the villages would sit around watching
the sheep and smoking their pipes, while
the women would be dying and weaving.
The women would often sit in rows, and
go down the line vertically, while a man
would tell them what color to weave or not
weave–like a little chant or poem." This
process could take up to five years for a
team of 10 weavers, depending on the scale
of the project.
Finally, court or city rugs, which were
made in workshops in the great cities of Iran
and the Ottoman Empire, are the antithesis
of their tribal counterparts, exhibiting perfect
symmetry and an extreme standardization
in their weave. They were manufactured
in workshops according to patterns
made by professional designers, on commission
to patrons or even royalty. The oldest
surviving city rugs date back to the 15th
or 16th centuries, but examples that old are
extremely scarce.
In general, whether their interest is tribal
or city, collectors tend to focus on 19th century
rugs. In order for a rug to be considered
"art-level," it must have been woven
before the advent of the so-called commercial
period in the early 20th century. The
industrialization of the Middle Eastern textile
market interfered too greatly with the
manufacture and selling of oriental rugs for
them to be seen any longer as purely artisanal
works. The introduction of artificial
chemical dyes was the death knell of the
traditional rug manufacturing process. "The
world of people who are serious about rugs
discount the ones made after 1900, because
that's when they stopped using natural
dyes," says Poullada. These
natural dyes–created from
shellfish to make Tyrian
purple or aubergine, or certain
insects to achieve a rich
red known as cochineal–
age better, as well, with the
dark colors often becoming
richer with age, and the light
colors softening.
Many collectors focus on
specific tribes or regions as a
matter of personal taste, but
certain types of carpets have
maintained their popularity
over the years. Rugs from
the 85 distinct tribes of the
Caucusus, the crossroads
between the Black and Caspian
seas, are prized among
collectors for their variety,
bold geometric patterns and
bright colors. Winitz recalls
a collector who embarked
on a still-unfulfilled quest
to acquire a rug from each of the 85 regions. "These rugs have quite a
kinship with modern art–Klee and Kandinsky
for example,were inspired by Caucasian
rugs. People who gravitate toward
Renaissance works or Old Master paintings,
I find, are more attracted to the rugs
of Laver Kirman."
The court or city rugs of Laver Kirman
in southwest Iran are known for their languid
lines, rich colors and large proportions–
sometimes pushing 15 by 25 feet.
"These rugs have
quite a kinship with
modern art–Klee
and Kandinsky for
example, were inspired
by Causasian rugs."
Jan David Winitz
President of the
Claremont Rug Company

It was a 17th century Laver Kirman that
set the record at Christie's New York
last spring for the top-selling rug at auction,
attaining a whopping $9.6 million.
Poullada acknowledges the desirability
of such a piece, saying, "We'd all like to
own 17th-century Persian carpets, but
only a museum in Qatar could afford it!"
Rahimipour notes that the age and origin
of that particular rug certainly played a part in its price, and generally these court
rugs command higher numbers, but it's often
hard to tell which rugs will bring in the
big bucks. "Every sale blows me away,"
says Rahimipour. "Sometimes I think certain
carpets are ugly and they sell for a
lot of money, or I think a carpet is beautiful
and it doesn't sell for what I thought it
would. But that's the beauty of auction."
Collectors are often attracted to smaller,
area-size rugs (3 by 4 to 6 by 9 feet), not
only because of the lower price, but also
because, as Winitz explains, "they're more
fun to play with." Small prayer rugs are also
increasing in popularity. "These rugs," says
Parker, "would have been rolled out five
times a day. I saw one recently that really
blew me away. It was from the Caucasus
region, probably around the 1890s.
It had an arch pointing towards Mecca
and had rows of a paisley pattern."
Other culturally significant tribal objects
such as bags and trappings are becoming
more coveted by collectors. Munkacsi,
who along with the Hajji Baba club recently
published a book, Timbuktu to Tibet,
in conjunction with an exhibition of
the same name, describes the tribes who
manufactured these objects as "textilesaturated
societies." He adds, "The yurts
they lived in were collapsible, and everything
they had could be put in a bag and
strapped on a donkey. You can't move
around a chest of drawers like that." These
trappings also had the ceremonial aspects,
says Munkacsi: "A young woman would
spend years preparing her wedding items,
and during the wedding ceremony she
would be transported from her home to
her husband's in a caravan. The trappings
she made would decorate the sides
of the camels in the caravan, and afterwards
would hang in the couple's yurt. All
these bags and trappings were like wampum–
they could be brought into town
and traded for things a family needed."
Each oriental rug (or related item) is an
ideal mix of aesthetic beauty, functionality
and material culture. Krody notes, "We
appreciate art for beauty but when we
hear the history of a piece we learn how
it has affected many lives. The dyes, the
materials of rugs–a pretty red isn't just
a pretty red, it really means something."
Original Article