The Oriental rug market viewed as a pyramid
Claremont Rug Company's proprietary Oriental Rug Pyramid (™) helps clients distinguish value and collectibility of carpets and make acquisition decisions
The only Oriental rug company ever honored as Robb Report’s “Best of the Best.”
"One of the world’s best sources of antique carpets." – Financial Times
Antique Oriental Art Carpets
Exploring the Traditions of Antique Oriental Rug Weaving
Claremont Rug Company's proprietary Oriental Rug Pyramid (™) helps clients distinguish value and collectibility of carpets and make acquisition decisions
A question I'm often asked is: How will antique rugs—a handcrafted artifact created on the other side of the world more than a hundred years ago—"work" in a modern home decorated with a collection of contemporary paintings, prints, photographs and sculpture?
For over thirty years, Jan David Winitz, President and founder Claremont Rug Company in Oakland, CA, has built a global reputation among carpet collectors and connoisseurs. Since Claremont Rug Company opened its doors in 1980, their niche has been a challenging, yet incredibly exciting one - offering only the finest in authentic, art-level antique carpets, coupled with entirely first cabin service.
Claremont Rug Company today announced the availability of a new, 28-page brochure which features 29 important, art-level 19th century Oriental rugs available at the Gallery.
Highlighted by a world record-price for an Oriental carpet sold at auction and the remarkable interest in rug-based interior design projects, the year 2010 has pushed the level of interest in art-level Oriental rugs to unprecedented heights.
The difficulty for connoisseurs to hone their eye for art-level 19th century Oriental rugs goes beyond their limited availability at individual galleries. The periodic international auctions invariably mix a few collectible carpets with dozens of pedestrian pieces.
When Claremont Rug Company announced an exhibit of a recent acquisition of 175 art-level, 19th century Oriental rugs, not even Gallery president Jan David Winitz was prepared for the response.