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Type: Turkish Rug - Yastik JBOC Notes:
Catalog Discription:
Fine Carpets
SALE L06870 LOT 51
SESSION 1 | 05 Apr 06 10:00 AM.
London, New Bond Street
PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE COLLECTOR, NEW YORK
f - AN OTTOMAN VOIDED SILK VELVET AND
METAL-THREAD (ÇATMA) PANEL, BURSA OR ISTANBUL,
TURKEY,
20,00030,000 GBP
MEASUREMENTS
approximately 156 by 123cm., 5ft. 2in. by 4ft.
1in.
DESCRIPTION
late 16th or early 17th century
with a repeating design of silver metal-thread
fan shaped carnations each with seven serrated
petals supported by palm leaves on a rich deep
crimson silk velvet ground, with a complementary
border formed by the overlaying of a stylised
frame formed of two narrow open stripes at both
the inner and outer edges
Condition Note:
the velvet in good condition, with very slight
losses mainly at central join, the silver
metal-thread tarnished with losses and abrasions,
composed of two full loom widths joined through
the central vertical axis, the edges later
oversewn with 1.4cm. gold coloured fabric strip,
fabric backed and slightly padded, fabric sheaths
sewn to reverse at top and bottom edge for
inserting hanging rods
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS
Colours: Velvet: burgundy; Metal-thread: ivory
silk core S-wrapped with silver coloured flat
metal strip
Pile: Compound 4/1 satin velvet with
discontinuous wefts bound in diagonal alignment
Warp, pile: silk, burgundy
Weft, discontinuous: silver metal-wrapped ivory
silk, twilled to the ground
Warp, foundation: silk, yellow (generally faded
to ivory)
Weft, foundation: Cotton, ivory, Z-spun
Sides: 1.3 - 1.5cm. cotton selvages overstitched
(twilled) in blue silk
Ends: 1cm. discontinuous yellow silk wefts, ivory
cotton foundation; wefts, incomplete, probably
cut from a continous repeat
PROVENANCE
The Textile Gallery, London
CATALOGUE NOTE
These large çatma panels, typically with a
narrow geometric inner frame and an endless
repeating design which extends beneath this
frame, are thought to have been used either as
wall hangings, curtains or as covers for divan.
This panel is in the 'quatre-fleurs style' named
for the four most commonly used flowers: the
tulip, hyacinth, rose and the carnation, all
closely associated with the Ottoman Court. The
carnation was one of the most beloved floral
motifs of the Ottomans and by the end of the 16th
century it had developed into the serrated
fan-shaped carnation palmette motif known as the
'fan' pattern, or yelpazeli.
Contemporaneous records show that the silk
weaving ateliers of Bursa and Istanbul were
carefully monitored by the Ottoman Court, the
number of looms and the usage of precious metals
was strictly controlled and workshops producing
anything but the highest quality of textiles were
forcibly closed down. It would follow that the
designs were also closely monitored and that
weavers and designers were forced to follow
strict guidelines as to form and content and
could, therefore, only show their creativity and
inventiveness within a very narrow remit.
With a limited number of ornaments and a
restricted range of colour the Ottoman textile
designers were able to achieve impressive
versatility using barely perceptible changes and
by constantly modifying composition and using
alternative combinations of motifs. They were
able to ensure that within the considerable
number of silks with offset rows of carnations
that are extant, there are very few identical
examples. Carnations have five, seven or even
nine petals, they may have variations of floral
sprays within each petal or none; the root, leaf
and secondary palmette motifs have minute
permutations and subtle changes. Although crimson
velvet is the dominant color, green, blue, ivory
and yellow detailing can be used along with
endless variations within the placement and usage
of gilt and silver metal thread.
Related velvets with variations on the current
lot include: a single panel velvet without a
border in the Textile Museum, Washington D,C.,
Inv. No. 1.52.1951, see: Mackie,
Louise W., The Splendour of Turkish Weaving, (ex.
cat.), The Textile Museum, Washington, D.C.,
1973, pp. 26 and 57, no. 15. A single left hand
side çatma panel with similar carnations, border
treatment and palm leaves in the Victoria and
Albert Museum Collection, London, Inv. No.
535-1884, see: Gürsu, Nevber, The Art of Turkish
Weaving, Istanbul, 1988, p. 140, no. 167 and
front cover. A seven petal carnation design
velvet and metal-thread cushion cover (minder)
with lappet ends and no supporting secondary
motifs was last sold in these rooms, 17 October
1997, lot 225, see: Herrmann, Eberhart,
Asiatische Teppich-und Textilkunst, Band 4,
Munich, 1992, p. 30, pl. 10 and is now in the
Collection of the Museum of Islamic Art, Qatar,
see: Thompson,
Jon, Silk, 13th to 18th centuries, London, 2004,
pp. 34-5, no. 6. Two other fragments with
similar fan-shaped carnations with five petals
rather than seven are illustrated in Erber,
Christian, (ed.), A Wealth of Silk and Velvet,
Ottoman Fabrics and Embroideries, Bremmen, 1983,
pp. 178-181, nos. G 10/1 and G 10/2 and a single
right hand side divan cover panel from the
Muncaster Castle Collection was sold in these
rooms 18th October 1995, lot 9. For a Russian
Orthodox cope (phelonion) formed from a loom
width with staggered rows of carnations in the
Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Inv. No. T-347
and a panel with three-coloured silk velvet pile
in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, Inv. no.
T.154-1949, see: Raby, Julian and Effeny, Alison
(eds.), Ipek, The Crescent and the Rose, Imperial
Ottoman Silks and Velvets, Istanbul, 2001, nos.
102 and 103. The closest parallels are two 2-loom
width panels of similar format to this one, both
in the Calouste Gulbenkian Collection, Lisbon,
Inv. Nos. 1384, and 1425, see: Un jardin
encantado, Arte islámico en la Colección
Calouste Gulbenkian, (ex. cat.), 2001, pp. 144-5,
no. 57 and Islamic Art in the Calouste Gulbenkian
Collection, (ex. cat.) Lisbon, 2004, p. 115, no.
49.
The sophisticated simplicity and elegance of this
magnificent and unique çatma panel exemplifies
the highest standard of Ottoman textile
production of the late 16th and 17th centuries.
Seen on www.Sothebys.com
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