Ei yhteyttä palvelimeen
Online-teemahuutokaupat
Helsinki Winter Sale F504
Huutokauppa:
Selected Gifts E1128
Huutokauppa:
Curated Timepieces – November F529
Huutokauppa:
Josef Frank and Friends – Winter Edition F534
Huutokauppa:
Jern's Weapon Collection E1122
Huutokauppa:
A Swedish Private Collection F578
Huutokauppa:
The Beautiful Line F593
Huutokauppa:
Design Jewellery Online E1100
Huutokauppa:
381
1500761

An antique Benlian Tabriz carpet, signed Jabarzade, ca 466 x 323 cm

Lähtöhinta
20 000 - 25 000 SEK
1 780 - 2 220 EUR
1 820 - 2 270 USD
Vasarahinta
20 000 SEK
Tietoa ostamisesta
Lisätietoja ja kuntoraportit
Christopher Stålhandske
Tukholma
Christopher Stålhandske
Asiantuntija matot, tekstiilit, islamilainen taidekäsityö
+46 (0)708 19 12 58
An antique Benlian Tabriz carpet, signed Jabarzade, ca 466 x 323 cm

From around 1910. An ivory ground with a large polychrome medallion, corner ornaments with arabesques, predators, deers, flower and palmette festoons as well as cartouches with inscriptions. A reddish brown main border with cloud bands, stylized flowers and large cartouches with inscriptions. One corner of the inner borders have an inscription in a star: Mahmoud Jabarzade Ghalibafian.

Muut tiedot

The Benlian star signature reads sherkat-e jabbarzadeh-ye qali-bafiyan va Mahmud, which translates as ‘The Jabbarzadeh Carpet weaving company and Mahmud’. Whilst other early 20th century workshops such as PETAG began producing Tabriz carpets of similar style, Benlian carpets can be identified by their eight-pointed star insignia woven in the corner of each inner guard stripe. The Benlian workshop was founded in the first half of the 20th century in Tabriz where it wove carpets specifically for the European market. Of Armenian descent, Edward E Benlian, a London based carpet dealer, had a strong affinity with the Armenian community of Tabriz and set up a workshop employing the best weavers in order to produce carpets of the highest quality. His master weavers included Javan Amir Kizi and Mahmud Ghalicheh, by whom the present carpet is woven. Both of these master weavers were extremely successful in reinterpreting the classical carpet designs of 16th and 17th century Safavid Persia, for more modern tastes.