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Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting

Carpets of Middle-Eastern origin, either from Anatolia, Persia, Armenia, Levant, the Mamluk state of Egypt or Northern Africa, were used as decorative features in Western European paintings from the 14th century onwards. More depictions of Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting survive than actual carpets contemporary with these paintings. Few Middle-Eastern carpets produced before the 17th century remain, though the number of these known has increased in recent decades. Therefore, comparative art-historical research has from its onset in the late 19th century relied on carpets represented in datable European paintings.

Left image: A "Bellini type" Islamic prayer rug, seen from the top, at the feet of the Virgin Mary, in Gentile Bellini's Madonna and Child Enthroned, late 15th century.
Right image: Prayer rug, Anatolia, late 15th to early 16th century, with "re-entrant" keyhole motif.
Left image: Hans Memling's Still Life with a Jug with Flowers, late 15th century.
Right image: Mugan carpet, Karabakh school,[1][2] late 14th to early 15th century, Azerbaijan Carpet Museum[1]

Art historical background edit

 
Petrus Christus, The Virgin and Child Enthroned with Saints Jerome and Francis (detail), 1457, with a realistic depiction of a pile-woven carpet. Städel Museum, Frankfurt
 
Jan van Eyck, Lucca Madonna (detail), c. 1430. Städel Museum, Frankfurt

Activities of scientists and collectors beginning in the late 19th century have substantially increased the corpus of surviving Oriental carpets, allowing for more detailed comparison of existing carpets with their painted counterparts. Western comparative research resulted in an ever more detailed cultural history of the Oriental art of carpet weaving. This has in turn renewed and inspired the scientific interest in their countries of origin. Comparative research based on Renaissance paintings and carpets preserved in museums and collections continues to contribute to the expanding body of art historical and cultural knowledge.

The tradition of precise realism among Western painters of the late 15th and 16th century provides pictorial material which is often detailed enough to justify conclusions about even minute details of the painted carpet. The carpets are treated with exceptional care in the rendering of colors, patterns, and details of form and design: The painted texture of a carpet depicted in Petrus Christus's Virgin and Child, the drawing of the individual patterns and motifs, and the way the pile opens where the carpet is folded over the steps, all suggest that the depicted textile is a pile-woven carpet.

Visually, the carpets serve to draw attention either to an important person, or to highlight a location where significant action is going on. In parallel with the development of Renaissance painting, initially mainly Christian saints and religious scenes are set out on the carpets. Later on, the carpets were integrated into secular contexts, but always served to represent the idea of opulence, exoticism, luxury, wealth, or status. First, their use was reserved for the most powerful and most wealthy, for royalty and nobility. Later, as more people gained sufficient wealth to afford goods of luxury, Oriental carpets appeared on the portraits of merchants and wealthy burghers. During the late 17th and 18th century, the interest in depicting carpets declined. In parallel, the paintings pay less attention to detail.

The richly designed Oriental carpets appealed strongly to Western painters. The rich and various colours may have influenced the great Venetian painters of the Quattrocento.[3] It has been suggested that the pictorial representation of carpets is linked to the development of the linear perspective,[4] which was first described by Leon Battista Alberti in 1435.[5]

The depiction of Oriental carpets in Renaissance paintings is regarded as an important contribution to a "world history of art", based upon interactions of different cultural traditions.[6] Rugs from the Islamic world arrived in large numbers in Western Europe by the 15th century, which is increasingly recognized as a pivotal temporal nexus in the cultural encounters that contributed to the development of Renaissance ideas, arts, and sciences. Intensified contacts, especially the increasing trade between the Islamic world and Western Europe, have provided material sources and cultural influences to Western artists during the next centuries to come. In turn, European market demands also affected the carpet production in their countries of origin.[3]

Origin and limitations of the comparative approach edit

In 1871, Julius Lessing published his book on Oriental carpet design. He was relying more on European paintings than on the examination of actual carpets for lack of material, because ancient Oriental carpets were not yet collected at the time when he worked on his book.[7] Lessing's approach has proven very useful to establish a scientific chronology of Oriental carpet weaving, and was further elaborated and expanded mainly by scholars of the "Berlin school" of History of Islamic art: Wilhelm von Bode, and his successors Friedrich Sarre, Ernst Kühnel, and Kurt Erdmann developed the "ante quem" method for the dating of oriental carpets based on Renaissance paintings.

These art historians were also aware of the fact that their scientific approach was biased: Only carpets produced by manufactories were exported to Western Europe, and consequently were available to the Renaissance artists.[8] Village or nomadic rugs did not reach Europe during the Renaissance, and were not depicted in paintings. Not until the mid twentieth century, when collectors like Joseph V. McMullan or James F. Ballard recognized the artistic and art historic value of village or nomadic carpets, were they appreciated in the Western World.

Characteristics edit

 
 
Left image: Domenico di Bartolo's The Marriage of the Foundlings features a large carpet with a Chinese-inspired phoenix-and-dragon pattern, 1440.[9]
Right image: Phoenix-and-dragon carpet, first half or middle of the 15th century, Berlin.[9][10]
 
 
Left image: Lippo Memmi's Virgin Mary and Child features an "animal carpet" with two opposed birds besides a tree, 1340-50.
Right image: Anatolian animal carpet, circa 1500, found in Marby Church, Sweden.

Pile carpets with geometric design are known to have been produced from the 13th century among the Seljuks of Rum in eastern Anatolia, whom Venice had had commercial relations since 1220.[11] The Medieval trader and traveler Marco Polo himself mentioned that the carpets produced at Konya were the best in the world:

...et ibi fiunt soriani et tapeti pulchriores de mundo et pulchrioris coloris.
"...and here they make the most beautiful silks and carpets in the world, and with the most beautiful colours."[12]

Carpets were also produced in Islamic Spain, and one is shown in a fresco of the 1340s in the Palais des Papes, Avignon.[13] The vast majority of carpets in 15th- and 16th-century paintings are either from the Ottoman Empire, or possibly European copies of these types from the Balkans, Spain, or elsewhere. In fact these were not the finest Islamic carpets of the period, and few of the top-quality Turkish "court" carpets are seen. Even finer than these, Persian carpets do not appear until the end of the 16th century, but become increasingly popular among the very wealthy in the 17th century. The very refined Mamluk carpets from Egypt are occasionally seen, mostly in Venetian paintings.[14]

One of the first uses of an Oriental carpet in a European painting is Simone Martini's Saint Louis of Toulouse Crowning Robert of Anjou, King of Naples, painted in 1316–1319.[15] Another Anatolian animal carpet appears in a c. 1340–45 Sienese panel of the Holy Family attributed to Pietro or Ambrogio Lorenzetti (Abegg-Stiftung, Riggisberg) with alternating black and white animals within colorful octagonal medallions.[16] European depictions of Oriental carpets were extremely faithful to the originals, judging by comparison with the few surviving examples of actual rugs of contemporary date. Their larger scale also allows more detailed and accurate depictions than those shown in miniature paintings from Turkey or Persia.

Most carpets use Islamic geometric designs, with the earliest ones also using animal patterns such as the originally Chinese-inspired "phoenix-and-dragon", as in Domenico di Bartolo's Marriage of the Foundlings (1440). These had been stylised and simplified into near-geometric motifs in their transmission to the Islamic world.[17] The whole group, referred to in the literature as "animal rugs" disappeared from paintings by about the end of the 15th century. Only a handful of original animal-pattern carpets survive, two from European churches, where their rarity presumably preserved them.[18] The "Marby rug", one of the finest examples, was preserved in a church of the Swedish town of Marby, and a bold adaptation of an originally Chinese "dragon and phoenix" motif is in Berlin. Both are rugs, less than 2 metres long, and about 1 metre wide, with two compartments, though the Berlin carpet lacks a border down one long side.[19] The "Dragon and Phoenix" and the "Marby" rugs were the only existing examples of animal carpets known until 1988. Since then, seven more carpets of this type have been found. They survived in Tibetan monasteries and were removed by monks fleeing to Nepal during the Chinese cultural revolution. One of these carpets was acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art,[20] which parallels a painting by the Sienese artist Gregorio di Cecco, The Marriage of the Virgin, 1423.[21] It shows large confronted animals, each with a smaller animal inside.

Although the carpets were displayed on a public floor in a few examples, most carpets on the floor are in an area reserved for the main protagonists, very often on a dais or in front of an altar, or down steps in front of the Virgin Mary or saints, or rulers,[22] in the manner of a modern red carpet. This presumably reflected the contemporary practice of royalty; in Denmark the 16th century Persian Coronation Carpet is used under the throne for coronations to this day. They are also often hung over balustrades or out of windows for festive occasions, such as the processions through Venice shown by Vittore Carpaccio or Gentile Bellini (see gallery);[23] when Carpaccio's St Ursula embarks they are hung over the sides of boats and footbridges.[24]

Oriental carpets were often depicted as a decorative element in religious scenes, and were a symbol of luxury, status and taste,[25] although they were becoming more widely available throughout the period, which is reflected in the paintings. In some cases, such as paintings by Gentile Bellini, the carpets reflect an early Orientalist interest, but for most painters they merely reflect the prestige of the carpets in Europe. A typical example is the Turkish carpet at the feet of the Virgin Mary in the 1456–1459 San Zeno Altarpiece by Andrea Mantegna (see detail).[26]

Non-royal portrait sitters were more likely to place their carpet on a table or other piece of furniture, especially in Northern Europe, though small rugs beside a bed are not uncommon, as in the Arnolfini Portrait of 1434.[27] Carpets are seen on tables in particular in Italian scenes showing the Calling of Matthew, when he was engaged in his work as a tax-collector,[28] and the life of Saint Eligius, who was a goldsmith. Both are shown sitting doing business at a carpet-covered table or shop counter.

The Oriental carpets used in Italian Renaissance painting had various geographical origins, designated in contemporary Italy by different names: the cagiarini (Mamluk design from Egypt), the damaschini (Damascus region), the barbareschi (North Africa), the rhodioti (probably imported through Rome), the turcheschi (Ottoman Empire) and the simiscasa (Circassian or Caucasian).[29]

Some of the prayer carpets represented in Christian religious paintings are Islamic prayer rugs, with such motifs as the mihrab or the Kaaba (the so-called re-entrant carpets, later called the "Bellini" type).[30] The representation of such prayer rugs disappeared after 1555, probably as a consequence of the realization of their religious meaning and connection to Islam.[31]

The depiction of Oriental carpets in paintings other than portraits generally declined after the 1540s, corresponding to a decline in the taste for highly detailed representation of objects (Detailism) among painters,[32] and grander classicising surrounds for hieratic religious images.

Carpet patterns named after artists edit

 
 
Left image: Lorenzo Lotto's Husband and Wife, 1523, with a "Bellini" carpet showing the keyhole re-entrant motif.
Right image: Re-entrant prayer rug, Anatolia, late 15th to early 16th century.
 
 
Left image: Carlo Crivelli's Annunciation with St Emidius, 1486, with Crivelli carpet in the upper left corner. See enlarged detail at left. Note that there is a second, different carpet at top center.
Right image: "Crivelli" carpet, Anatolia, late 15th-early 16th century.

When Western scholars explored the history of Islamic carpetmaking, several types of carpet pattern became conventionally called after the names of European painters who had used them, and these terms remain in use. The classification is mostly that of Kurt Erdmann, once Director of the Museum für Islamische Kunst (Berlin), and the leading carpet scholar of his day. Some of these types ceased to be produced several centuries ago, and the location of their production remains uncertain, so obvious alternative terms were not available. The classification ignores the border patterns, and distinguishes between the type, size and arrangement of gul, or larger motifs in the central field of the carpet. In addition to four types of Holbein carpets,[33] there are Bellini carpets, Crivellis, Memlings, and Lotto carpets.[34] These names are somewhat random: many artists painted these types, and single artists often painted many types of carpets.

Bellini carpets edit

Both Giovanni Bellini and his brother Gentile (who visited Istanbul in 1479) painted examples of prayer rugs with a single "re-entrant" or keyhole motif at the bottom of a larger figure traced in a thin border. At the top end the borders close diagonally to a point, from which hangs down a "lamp". The design had Islamic significance, and its function seems to have been recognised in Europe, as they were known in English as "musket" carpets, a corruption of "mosque".[35] In the Gentile Bellini seen at top the rug is the "right" way round; often this is not the case. Later Ushak prayer rugs where both ends have the diagonal pointed inner border, as at the top only of Bellini rugs, are sometimes known as "Tintoretto" rugs, though this term is not as commonly used as the others mentioned here.[36]

Crivelli carpets edit

Carlo Crivelli twice painted what seems to be the same small rug, with the centre taken up with a complex sixteen-pointed star motif made up of several compartments in different colours, some containing highly stylised animal motifs. Comparable actual carpets are extremely rare, but there are two in Budapest.[37] The Annunciation of 1482 in the Städel museum in Frankfurt shows it at the top, and the same carpet seems to be used in the Annunciation, with Saint Emidius in the National Gallery, London (1486), which shows the type hung over a balcony to the top left, and a different type of carpet over another balcony in the right foreground. These seem to be a transitional type between the early animal-pattern carpets and later purely geometrical designs, such as the Holbein types, perhaps reflecting increased Ottoman enforcement of Islamic aniconism.[38]

Memling carpets edit

 
 
Left image: yellow Oriental carpet in Hans Memling altarpiece of 1488–1490. The "hooked" motif defines a "Memling carpet".[39] Louvre Museum.
Right image: Konya 18th century carpet with Memling gul design.

These are named after Hans Memling, who painted several examples of what may have been Armenian carpets in the last quarter of the fifteenth century, and are characterised by several lines coming off the motifs that end in "hooks", by coiling in on themselves through two or three 90° turns. Another example appears in a miniature painted for René of Anjou about 1460.[40][41]

Holbein carpets edit

 
 
Left image: Unknown painter, The Somerset House Conference, with a small-pattern Holbein carpet.
Right image: Small-pattern Holbein carpet, Anatolia, 16th century.

These in fact are seen in paintings from many decades earlier than Holbein, and are sub-divided into four types (of which Holbein actually only painted two); they are the commonest designs of Anatolian rug seen in Western Renaissance paintings, and continued to be produced for a long period. All are purely geometric and use a variety of arrangements of lozenges, crosses and octagonal motifs within the main field. The sub-divisions are between:[42]

  • Type I: Small-pattern Holbein. This type is defined by an infinite repeat of small patterns, with alternating rows of octagons and staggered rows of diamonds, as seen in Holbein the Younger's Portrait of Georg Gisze (1532), or the Somerset House Conference (1608).[43][44]
  • Type II: now more often called Lotto carpets - see below.
  • Type III: Large-pattern Holbein. The motifs in the field inside the border consist of one or two large squares filled with octagons, placed regularly, and separated from each other and from the borders by narrow stripes. There are no secondary "gul" motifs. The carpet in Holbein's The Ambassadors is of this type.[45][46]
  • Type IV: Large-pattern Holbein. Large, square, star-filled compartments are combined with secondary, smaller squares containing octagons or other "gul" motifs. In contrast to the other types, which only contain patterns of equal scale, the type IV Holbein shows subordinate ornaments of unequal scale.[47][48]

Lotto carpets edit

 
 
Left image: The Alms of St. Anthony by Lorenzo Lotto, 1542, with two magnificent Oriental carpets, the one in the foreground the type for the Lotto carpet, the other a "para-Mamluk".[49]
Right image: Western Anatolia knotted wool "Lotto carpet", 16th century, Saint Louis Art Museum.

These were previously known as "small-pattern Holbein Type II", but he never painted one, unlike Lorenzo Lotto, who did so several times, though he was not the first artist to show them. Lotto is also documented as owning a large carpet, though its pattern is unknown. They were primarily produced during the 16th and 17th centuries along the Aegean coast of Anatolia, but also copied in various parts of Europe, including Spain, England and Italy. They are characterized by a lacy arabesque, usually in yellow on a red ground, often with blue details.[50]

Though they look very different from Holbein Type I carpets, they are a development of the type, where the edges of the motifs, nearly always in yellow on a red ground, take off in rigid arabesques somewhat suggesting foliage, and terminating in branched palmettes. The type was common and long-lasting, and is also known as "Arabesque Ushak".[51]

To judge from paintings, they reached Italy by 1516, Portugal about a decade later, and northern Europe, including England, by the 1560s. They continue to appear in paintings until about the 1660s, especially in the Netherlands.[50]

Ghirlandaio carpets edit

 
Domenico Ghirlandaio: Madonna and Child enthroned with Saint, circa 1483
 
West Anatolian ‘Ghirlandaio’ rug, late 17th century

A carpet closely related to the 1483 painting by Domenico Ghirlandaio was found by A. Boralevi in the Evangelical church, Hâlchiu (Heldsdorf) in Transylvania, attributed to Western Anatolia, and dated to the late 15th century.[52]

The general design of the Ghirlandaio type, as in the 1486 painting, is related to Holbein Type 1. It is defined by one or two central medallions of diamond shape, consisting of an octagon within a square, from whose sides triangular, curvilinear patterns arise. Carpets with this medallion have been woven in the Western Anatolian region of Çanakkale since the 16th century.[53] A carpet fragment with a Ghirlandaio medallion was found in the Divriği Great Mosque, and dated to the 16th century. Carpets with similar medallions were dated to the 17th,[54][55] 18th[56] and 19th[57][58] century, respectively, and are still woven in the Çanakkale region today.

In his essay on "Centralized Designs", Thompson[59] relates the central medallion pattern of oriental carpets to the "lotus pedestal" and "cloud collar (yun chien)" motifs, used in the art of Buddhist Asia. The origin of the design thus dates back to pre-Islamic times, probably Yuan time China. Brüggemann and Boehmer further elaborate that it might have been introduced to Western Anatolia by the Seljuk, or Mongol invaders in the 11th or 13th century.[60] In contrast to the manifold variation of patterns seen in other carpet types, the Ghirlandaio medallion design has remained largely unaltered from the 15th to the 21st century, and thus exemplifies an unusual continuity of a woven carpet design within a specific region.

Van Eyck and Petrus Christus: Painted carpets without surviving counterparts edit

The Netherlandish painters Jan van Eyck, in his Paele Madonna, Lucca Madonna, and the Dresden Triptych, and Petrus Christus in his Virgin and Child Enthroned with Saints Jerome and Francis have painted four different carpets, three of them of a similar design. By the realism of the depictions, these are pile-woven carpets. No directly comparable carpets have survived.[61]

The carpet pattern depicted on van Eyck's Paele Madonna could be traced back to late Roman origins and related to early Islamic floor mosaics found in the Umayyad palace of Khirbat al-Mafjar.[62]

Similar, but not identical carpets appear in the Lucca Madonna, Dresden triptych, and Virgin and Child with Saints paintings which show a predominantly geometric design with a lozenge composition in infinite repeat, built up from fine bands which connect eight-pointed stars. Yetkin has identified an Anatolian carpet with a similar, but more advanced lozenge design (Yetkin, 1981, plate 47[53] in the Mevlana Museum, Konya, dated to the 17th century. She relates these carpets to 19th century Caucasian "Dragon" rugs with a similar lozenge design (p. 71[53]), and claims that carpets of a type as depicted by van Eyck and Petrus Christus are early Anatolian forerunners to the later Caucasian design.

The main borders of the carpets in the Paele and Lucca Madonna, as well as in Virgin and Child with Saints however, each show a non-Oriental undulating trefoil stem.[63] Similar ornaments can be found in the borders of many carpets in Early Netherlandish paintings from the 15th to the beginning of the 16th century.[63] The fringes of these carpets are often found at the sides of the painted carpets, not at the upper and lower ends. Either did the carpets have an uncommonly square shape, or maybe the artists have used some license and improvised with the authentic models. Alternatively, the carpets depicted by van Eyck and Petrus Christus could be of Western European manufacture. The undulating trefoil design is a well-known feature of Western Gothic ornament.[63]

Specific carpet types edit

Mamluk and Ottoman Cairene carpets edit

From the middle of the 15th century onwards, a type of carpet was produced in Egypt which is characterized by a dominant central medallion, or three to five medallions in a row along the vertical axis. Numerous smaller ornaments are placed around the medallions, such as eight-pointed stars, or small ornaments composed of stylized floral elements. The innumerable small geometric and floral ornaments give a kaleidoscopic impression. Sixty of these carpets were given to the English cardinal Thomas Wolsey in exchange for a license for Venetian merchants to import wine to England.[64] The earliest known painting representing a Mamluk carpet is Giovanni Bellinis Portrait of the Doge of Venice Loredan and his four advisers from 1507. A French master depicted The Three De Coligny brothers in 1555. Another representation can be found on Ambrosius Frankens The Last Supper, about 1570. The large medallion is depicted in a way that it forms the nimbus of the head of Christ. The characteristic Mamluk carpet ornaments are clearly visible. Ydema has documented a total of sixteen dateable representations of Mamluk carpets.[65]

After the 1517 Ottoman conquest of the Mamluk Sultanate in Egypt, two different cultures merged, as is seen on Mamluk carpets woven after this date. After the conquest of Egypt, the Cairene weavers adopted an Ottoman Turkish design.[66] The production of these carpets continued in Egypt into the early 17th century.[67] A carpet of the Ottoman Cairene type is depicted in Ludovicus Finsonius' painting The Annunciation. Its border design and guard borders are the same as a carpet in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.[68] A similar carpet has been depicted by Adriaen van der Venne in Geckie met de Kous, 1630. Peter Paul Rubens and Jan Brueghel the Elders Christ in the House of Mary and Martha, 1628, shows the characteristic S-stems ending in double sickle-shaped lancet leaves. Various carpets of the Ottoman Cairene type are depicted in Moretto da Brescias frescoes in the "Sala delle Dame" at the Palazzo Salvadego in Brescia, Italy.[69]

"Chequerboard" or Compartment carpets from the 17th century edit

An extremely rare group of carpets, "chequerboard" carpets were assumed to be a later and derivative continuum of the Mamluk and Ottoman Cairene group of carpets. Only about 30 of these carpets survived. They are distinguished by their design composed of rows of squares with triangles in each corner enclosing a star pattern. All "chequerboard" carpets have borders with cartouches and lobed medallions. Their attribution is still under debate. The colours and patterns resemble those seen in Mamluk carpets; however, they are "S-spun" and "Z-twisted" and thus similar to early Armenian carpets. Since the early days of carpet science they are attributed to Damascus. Pinner and Franses champion this attribution because Syria was part first of the Mamluk, later of the Ottoman Empire at that time. This would explain the similarities with the colours and patterns of the Cairene carpets.[70] The current dating of the "chequerboard" carpets is also consistent with European collection inventories from the early 17th century. Carpets of the "chequerboard" type are depicted on Pietro Paolinis (1603−1681) Self portrait, as well as on Gabriël Metsus painting The musical party.

Large Ushak (star and medallion) carpets edit

In contrast to the relatively large number of surviving carpets of this type, relatively few of them are represented in Renaissance paintings.[71]

Star Ushak carpets were often woven in large formats. As such, they represent a typical product of higher organized, town manufacture. They are characterized by large dark blue star shaped primary medallions in infinite repeat on a red ground field containing a secondary floral scroll. The design was likely influenced by northwest Persian book design, or by Persian carpet medallions.[72] As compared to the medallion Ushak carpets, the concept of the infinite repeat in star Ushak carpets is more accentuated and in keeping with the early Turkish design tradition.[73] Because of their strong allusion to the infinite repeat, the star Ushak design can be used on carpets of various size and in many varying dimensions.

Medallion Ushak carpets usually have a red or blue field decorated with a floral trellis or leaf tendrils, ovoid primary medallions alternating with smaller eight-lobed stars, or lobed medallions, intertwined with floral tracery. Their border frequently contains palmettes on a floral and leaf scroll, and pseudo-kufic characters.[74]

The best known representation of a Medallion Ushak was painted in 1656 by Vermeer in his painting The Procuress. It is placed horizontally; the upper or lower end with the star-shaped corner medallion can be seen. Under the woman's hand which holds the glass, a part of a characteristic Ushak medallion can be seen. The carpet seen on Vermeer's The Music Lesson, Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window, and The Concert hardly show any differences in the details of the design or the weaving structure indicate that all three pictures might trace back to one single carpet Vermeer might have had at his studio. The paintings by Vermeer, Steen, and Verkolje depict a special type of Ushak carpet of which no surviving counterpart is known. It is characterized by its rather sombre colours, coarse weaving, and patterns with a more degenerated curvilinear design.[75]

Persian and Anatolian carpets in the 17th century edit

 
 
Left image: Pieter de Hooch: Portrait of a family making music, 1663, Cleveland Museum of Art
Right image: "Transylvanian" type prayer rug, 17th century, National Museum, Warsaw

Carpets remained an important way of enlivening the background of full-length portraits throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, for example in the English portraits of William Larkin.[76]

The finely-knotted silk carpets woven in the time of Shah Abbas I at Kashan and Isfahan are rarely represented in paintings, as they were doubtless very unusual in European homes;[77] however, A Lady playing the Theorbo by Gerard Terborch (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 14.40.617) shows such a carpet laid upon the table on which the lady's cavalier is sitting.[78] Floral "Isfahan" carpets of the Herat type, on the other hand, were exported in great numbers to Portugal, Spain, and the Netherlands, and are often represented in interiors painted by Velásquez, Rubens, Van Dyck, Vermeer, Terborch, de Hooch, Bol and Metsu, where the dates established for the paintings provide a yardstick for establishing the chronology of the designs.[79]

Anthony van Dyck's royal and aristocratic subjects had mostly progressed to Persian carpets, but less wealthy sitters are still shown with the Turkish types. The 1620 Portrait of Abraham Graphaeus by Cornelis de Vos, and Thomas de Keyser's Portrait of an unknown man (1626) and Portrait of Constantijn Huyghens and his clerk (1627) are amongst the earliest paintings depicting a new type of Ottoman Turkish manufactory carpet, which was exported to Europe in large quantities, probably in order to meet the increasing demand. A large number of similar carpets were preserved in Transylvania, which was an important center of Armenian carpet trade during the 15th–19th century. Many Armenians left their homes in Western Armenia ruled by Ottoman Turkey and founded craft centers of carpet weaving in Gherla, Transylvania. Hence, carpets of this type are known by a term of convenience as "Transylvanian carpets".[80][81] Pieter de Hoochs 1663 painting Portrait of a family making music depicts an Ottoman prayer rug of the "Transylvanian" type.[82] In the American colonies, Isaac Royall and his family were painted by Robert Feke in 1741, posed round a table spread with a Bergama rug.[83]

From the mid-century European direct trade with India brought Mughal versions of Persian patterns to Europe. Painters of the Dutch Golden Age showed their skill by depiction of light effects on table-carpets, like Vermeer in his Music Lesson (Royal Collection). By this date they have become common in the homes of the reasonably well-to-do, as is shown by historical documentation of inventories. Carpets are sometimes depicted in scenes of debauchery from the prosperous Netherlands.[84]

By the end of the century, Oriental carpets had lost much of their status as prestige objects, and the grandest sitters for portraits were more likely to be shown on the high-quality Western carpets, like Savonneries, now being produced, whose less intricate patterns were also easier to depict in a painterly manner. A number of Orientalist European painters continued to accurately depict Oriental carpets, now usually in Oriental settings.

Perception of Oriental carpets during the Renaissance edit

 
At the top, detail of the Virgin's mantle hem in Antonio Vivarini's Saint Louis de Toulouse, 1450. At the bottom, detail of the Virgin's mantle hem in Jacopo Bellini's Virgin of Humility, 1440. Louvre Museum.

The perception of Oriental carpets during the Renaissance is characterized by three main aspects:

  1. Due to their perceived rarity, preciousness and strangeness, Oriental carpets were depicted as a background for saints and religious scenes. Later on, the religious iconography was taken over by politically powerful persons in order to assert their status and power.
  2. Oriental carpets were more generally perceived as a rare commodity, and objects of luxury and decoration. From the mid 16th century onwards, the iconological context sometimes extended towards the idea of profligacy or vanity.
  3. When contacts, often of a violent nature, grew closer between the Islamic world and Europe, Oriental carpets were sometimes used as a symbol of Christian self-assertion.

In any case, Oriental carpets were used in Western Europe in different ways and contexts than in the Islamic world, and their original cultural context was never fully understood.[6]

Sacred Ground – or "Christian Oriental Carpets"? edit

Oriental carpets appear for the first time on early Renaissance paintings of the late 12th century. In most cases the carpets serve as a background for religious scenes. Saints were depicted enthroned or standing on carpets, thus being elated, and separated from their surroundings. Ordinary people, often the donors of the painting, were sometimes allowed to participate in the atmosphere of holiness by depicting them near the holy person, or literally kneeling or standing "on the same carpet" as the saint. This context is still understood and at times used today.[85]

The exact interpretation of the religious context has been proposed by Volkmar Gantzhorn in 1998. He compared in detail the patterns and symbols of both the Renaissance paintings and surviving carpets with ancient ornaments, for example with Armenian illuminated manuscripts. He concluded that the majority of the surviving and painted carpets alike were produced by Christian Armenian weavers. The hidden Christian symbolism of the carpet patterns had therefore made the so-called "Christian oriental carpets" appropriate adornments for Western European Christian churches. Following this hypothesis, the lack of contemporary Western European written sources, which could otherwise provide independent evidence to support Gantzhorn's claims, is explained by the fact that the knowledge of the hidden symbols was subject to oral tradition, and restricted to a small religious élite. The Armenian genocide had led to the loss of the oral tradition, and, subsequently, to an incorrect "Islamic" attribution of the carpets by the majority of Western art historians.[86] The debate about Gantzhorn's hypotheses, which is at times conducted polemically and not entirely free of nationalistic constraints, is still ongoing. And it's high time to announce the real story of rugs/carpets to the world and present the first ancient rug found in Pazyryk as an ancient Armenian rag woven by fine and talented Armenian masters in the 5th century BC. When chemists and dye specialists of the Hermitage Museum examined the Pazyryk carpet for various substances, it has been concluded that the red threads used in the carpet were colored with a dye made from the Armenian cochineal, which was anciently found on the Ararat plains. Moreover, the technique used to create the Pazyryk carpet is consistent with the Armenian double knot technique.

Objects of luxury and decoration edit

 
Carpets displayed over windows for a procession in Venice. Detail by Vittore Carpaccio, 1507

We do not understand exactly how Renaissance artists thought about the Oriental carpets they were depicting. We know that the Venetian Piazza San Marco was adorned with carpets hanging from the windows of the surrounding palaces and houses on special occasions. Like the beautiful ladies looking out of the windows, the carpets function as a decorative framework, and highlight the important action which is going on. Similar to the inaccurate pseudo-kufic writing in contemporary paintings, the European artists borrowed something from another culture which they, essentially, did not understand.[6]

 
Jan Steen, The way you hear it, circa 1665, Mauritshuis
 
Simon de Vos, Merrymakers in an Inn, 1630–9, Walters Art Museum
 
Pieter Boel, Still life with globe and parrot, circa 1658

In a series of letters[87] from Venice dated 18 August – 13 October 1506,[88] the German painter Albrecht Dürer tells his friend Willibald Pirckheimer about his efforts to buy two carpets for him in Venice:

Vnd dy 2 tebich will mir Anthoni Kolb awff daz hubschpt, preytest vnd wolfeillest helfen khawffen. So jch sy hab, will jch sy dem jungen Im Hoff geben, daz er ys ewch einschlache. Awch will jch sehen noch den kranchs federen.

"Anthoni Kolb will help me buying 2 carpets, the nicest, broadest and cheapest [we can get]. As soon as I have them, I will hand them over to the young Im Hoff, and he will prepare them for transport. I will look for crane feathers as well."

(18 August 1506)

Jtem allen fleis hab jch an kertt mit den tewichen, kan aber kein preiten an kumen. Sy sind al schmall vnd lang. Aber noch hab jch altag forschung dornoch, awch der Anthoni Kolb.
"I've done all I could with the carpets, but I cannot get any of the broad ones. They are all narrow and oblong. I'm continuing my search every day, Anthoni Kolb as well."

(8 September 1506)

Jch hab awch zwen dewich bestelt, dy würd jch morgen tzalen. Aber jch hab sy nit wolfell kunen kawffen.
"I've ordered two carpets, and will pay for them tomorrow. But I could not buy at a cheap price."

(13 October 1506)

— Albrecht Dürer, letters from Venice to Willibald Pirckheimer[87]

Dürer was buying various exotic luxury goods for Pirckheimer in Venice, and he mentions the two carpets amongst gold, jewels, and crane feathers. We do not know if Dürer in any way attributed artistic value to these carpets. No Oriental carpets were ever depicted by Dürer.[89]

A very common type of genre painting of the Dutch Golden Age and Flemish Baroque, the so-called Merry Company type of painting, depicts a group of people enjoying themselves, usually seated with drinks, and often music-making. In these pictures, Oriental carpets often cover and decorate the table, or are spread over the furniture. As such, they either underline the wealth and respectability of the portrayed, or add a context of exoticism and profligacy to brothel scenes, or scenes of debauchery.[90]

By the 16th century, Oriental carpets were often depicted in still life paintings. Assorted valuable, exotic objects like Chinese porcelain bowls and animals like parrots are depicted, often with an allegorical meaning, or symbolizing "vanitas", the futility of human life. The allusion to futility is made apparent by the inclusion of symbols like a human skull, or inscriptions quoting the biblical book of Ecclesiastes 1:2;12:8. As early as 1533, Hans Holbein's painting The Ambassadors prominently shows an anamorphic projection of a human skull. Objects in still life paintings, regardless of their allegorical meaning, are often placed on precious velvet table cloths, marble plates, or Oriental carpets. As such, Oriental carpets are treated similar to other precious objects or materials, the focus being on their material value and decorative effect.[91]

Objects of European self-assertion edit

 
Portrait of Sultan Mehmet II by Gentile Bellini. Victoria and Albert Museum, London

In September 1479 the Venetian painter Gentile Bellini was sent by the Venetian Senate as a cultural ambassador to Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror's new Ottoman capital Constantinople as part of the peace settlement between Venice and the Turks. Vasari wrote that Bellini "portrayed the Emperor Mahomet from the life so well, that it was held a miracle".[92] The dating and authorship of the portrait by Bellini have been placed in question,[93] however, Bellini is the first great Renaissance painter who actually visited an Islamic Sultan's court.

The influence of Bellinis encounter with the Islamic world is reflected by Oriental motifs appearing in several of his paintings. His 1507 St. Mark Preaching at Alexandria anachronistically shows the patron saint of Venice preaching to Muslims. The architecture shown in the background is an incongruous assortment of buildings, not corresponding to contemporary Islamic architecture. The stage-like setting for St Mark's sermon is adorned by exotic animals like a camel and a giraffe, as well as architectural elements like an ancient Egyptian obelisk, in the background.[6] Bellini's use of these decorative elements resembles the way Oriental carpets are depicted in 14th and 15th century Renaissance paintings: They are depictions of the exotic and the precious, they set a stage for an important person or action, but, as yet, essentially ignore their original cultural context.

 
Ambrosius Francken: The Last Supper, 16th century, Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp, with an Egyptian Mamluk carpet

The 1547 depiction of King Edward VI of England standing on an Oriental carpet in front of a throne on the same carpet asserts the young fidei defensor's strength and power, by a deliberate echo of the pose of his father's famous portrait by Holbein.

Nothing is known about how much Ambrosius Francken knew about the cultural background of the Mamluk carpet, which he used as a decoration for his Last Supper. The painting can only be roughly dated to the 16th century. The use of the central medallion of an Oriental carpet to highlight the nimbus of Christ, however, represents a special case: The use of the motif could either have resulted from a mere similarity of the two pictorial patterns, but it can also be understood as an assertion of Renaissance Christian predominance. Europeans had reasons to fear the Islamic world: in 1529 Suleiman the Magnificent was besieging Vienna, and the Ottoman Empire remained a constant threat to Western Europe until the late 17th century.

In his 1502–9 cycle of the Piccolomini library frescoes at the Dome of Siena, Pinturicchio depicts Pope Pius II convoking, as the Latin inscription explains, a Diet of Princes at Mantua to proclaim a new crusade in 1459. On the eighth fresco, a table in front of the Pope's throne is covered by an Oriental carpet. It was hypothesized that the carpet might have been a trophy from previous expeditions.[6]

Precious Oriental carpets were part of the so-called "Türkenbeute" (lit.: "Turkish loot") from the siege of Vienna, which ended on 12 September 1683, and their new Christian owners proudly reported back home about their plunder. Carpets exist with inscriptions indicating the new owner, and the date when it was acquired:

A. D. Wilkonski XII septembris 1683 z pod Wiednia
"A. D. Wilkonski, Vienna, 12 September 1683"

— Inscription on the backside of an Oriental "Polonaise" carpet, once in the Moore collection, current location unknown.[3]

The majority of Oriental carpets, however, continue to be depicted as objects with visual appeal, without political connotations, but ignoring their original cultural context. It was reserved to a later century to try and reach out for a better understanding of the carpets within their Islamic cultural context. Whilst Islamic carpets initially served to adorn Renaissance paintings, later on the paintings contributed to a better understanding of the carpets. Comparative art historical research on Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting thus adds another facette, and leads to a better understanding of the highly multifaceted, and sometimes ambivalent, image of the Ottomans during the Western European Renaissance.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Лятиф Керимов. Азербайджанский ковёр. Том III. VI. Карабахская школа. Б) Джебраилская группа. Б.: «Гянджлик», 1983, рис.121
  2. ^ Azerbaijani carpets: Karabakh group, Azerbaijan Carpet Museum, page 124-125 Accessed: 28. 07. 2013
  3. ^ a b c Erdmann, Kurt (1970). Erdmann, Hannah (ed.). Seven Hundred Years of Oriental Carpets. Translated by Beattie, May H.; Herzong, Hildegard. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520018167.
  4. ^ Bier, Carol (2010). "From grid to projected grid: Oriental carpets and the development of linear perspective". Proceedings of the Textile Society of America - 12th Biennal Symposium. Retrieved 27 August 2015.
  5. ^ Alberti, Leon Battista (2011). Sinisgalli, Rocco (ed.). On painting : a new translation and critical edition (1. publ. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107000629.
  6. ^ a b c d e Carrier, David (2008). A world art history and its objects. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 978-0271034157.
  7. ^ Lessing, Julius (1877). Altorientalische Teppichmuster: Nach Bildern und Originalen des XV. - XVI. Jahrhunderts, translated into English as Ancient Oriental Carpet Patterns after Pictures and Originals of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries. London: H. Sotheran & Co., 1879. Berlin.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ Erdmann, Kurt (1977). Pinner, R.: Editorial to "The history of the early Turkish carpet." by K. Erdmann (1977 English ed. of the original, 1957 German ed.). London: Oguz Pr. ISBN 9780905820026.
  9. ^ a b Mack, p.75
  10. ^ King & Sylvester, 49
  11. ^ Mack, p.74
  12. ^ Marsden, William (2010). Wright, Thomas (ed.). Travels of Marco Polo, the Venetian: the translation of Marsden revised. [S.l.]: Bibliobazaar, Llc. p. 28. ISBN 978-1142126261.
  13. ^ King & Sylvester, 10-11
  14. ^ King & Sylvester, 17
  15. ^ Mack, p.74-75. Image
  16. ^ Burke, S. Maureen (2011). "Mary with Her Spools of Thread: Domesticating the Sacred Interior in Tuscan Trecento Art". in John Garton and Diane Wolfthal, eds., New Studies on Old Masters: Essays in Renaissance Art in Honour of Colin Eisler. Toronto: Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies. p. 295.
  17. ^ Mack, p.75. King & Sylvester, pp. 13, and 49-50.
  18. ^ King & Sylvester, pp. 49-50.
  19. ^ King & Sylvester, 49-50
  20. ^ "Animal carpet at the Metropolitan Museum of Art". Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  21. ^ "National Gallery London". National Gallery London NG 1317. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  22. ^ Mack, p.76
  23. ^ King & Sylvester, p. 14
  24. ^ Carpaccio image
  25. ^ Mack, p.73-93
  26. ^ Mack, p.67
  27. ^ King & Sylvester, p. 20
  28. ^ King & Sylvester, 14
  29. ^ Mack, p.77
  30. ^ Mack, p.84. King & Sylvester, p. 58.
  31. ^ Mack, p.85.
  32. ^ Mack, p.90
  33. ^ Old Turkish carpets website
  34. ^ King & Sylvester
  35. ^ King and Sylvester, pp. 14-16, 56, 58.
  36. ^ King & Sylvester, 78
  37. ^ One shown here, about a third of the way down the page.
  38. ^ King & Sylvester, pp. 14, 26, 57-58. Campbell, p. 189.National Gallery zoomable image 2009-05-07 at the Wayback Machine. There is a different type of carpet hung from the Virgin's house, at top center-right.
  39. ^ King and Sylvester, p. 57
  40. ^ Todd Richardson, Plague, Weather, and Wool, AuthorHouse, 2009, p.182(344), ISBN 1-4389-5187-6, ISBN 978-1-4389-5187-4
  41. ^ King and Sylvester, pp. 56-57.
  42. ^ King & Sylvester, pp. 26-27, 52-57. Campbell, p. 189.
  43. ^ Old Ottoman carpets, see also last note.
  44. ^ Erdmann, Kurt (1965). Der Orientalische Knüpfteppich. = Oriental Carpets: An Essay on their History. tr. C. G. Ellis, New York, 1960 (3rd ed.). Tübingen: Verlag Ernst Wasmuth. p. 23.
  45. ^ Old Ottoman carpets, Large-pattern Type III Holbein Carpets. See also note to the last paragraph.
  46. ^ Erdmann, Kurt (1965). Der Orientalische Knüpfteppich. = Oriental Carpets: An Essay on their History. tr. C. G. Ellis, New York, 1960 (3rd ed.). Tübingen: Verlag Ernst Wasmuth. p. 25.
  47. ^ Old Ottoman carpets, Large-pattern Type IV Holbein Carpets. See also note to the last paragraph.
  48. ^ Erdmann, Kurt (1965). Der Orientalische Knüpfteppich. = Oriental Carpets: An Essay on their History. tr. C. G. Ellis, New York, 1960 (3rd ed.). Tübingen: Verlag Ernst Wasmuth. p. 26.
  49. ^ King and Sylvester, p. 17.
  50. ^ a b King and Sylvester, p. 67
  51. ^ Cambell, p. 189. Old Ottoman carpets. Type II Holbein or "Lotto" Carpets. King and Sylvester, pp. 16, 67-70.
  52. ^ Ionescu, Stefano (2004). "Transsylvanian Tale" (PDF). HALI (137): 53. Retrieved 22 June 2015 – via www.transsylvanian rug.
  53. ^ a b c d Yetkin, Serare (1981). Historical Turkish Carpets (1st ed.). Istanbul: Turkiye is Bankasi Cultural Publications. pp. 59–65.
  54. ^ "17th century Ghirlandaio carpet sold at Christie's 5 April 2011".
  55. ^ Herrmann, Eberhart (1988). Seltene Orientteppiche/Rare Oriental Carpets Vol. X (1st ed.). Munich: Eberhart Herrmann. p. 39. ISBN 3-923349-60-2.
  56. ^ Denny, Walter B. (2014). How to Read Islamic Carpets (1 ed.). New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-58839-540-5.
  57. ^ "19th century Ghirlandaio carpet at the Met Museum of Art". Retrieved 16 June 2015.
  58. ^ Zipper, Kurt; Fritzsche, Claudia (1995). Oriental Rugs Vol. 4 - Turkish (1st ed.). Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK: Antique Collectors' Club, Ltd. p. 18.
  59. ^ Herrmann, Eberhart (1982). From Konya to Kokand - Rare Oriental Carpets III. Munich: Eberhart Herrmann.
  60. ^ Brüggemann, Werner; Boehmer, Harald (1982). Teppiche der Bauern und Nomaden in Anatolien (1st ed.). Munich: Verlag Kunst und Antiquitäten. pp. 60–78. ISBN 3-921811-20-1.
  61. ^ King and Sylvester, 20
  62. ^ Brüggemann, Werner (2007). Der Orientteppich/The Oriental Carpet (1st ed.). Wiesbaden, Germany: Dr Ludwig Reichert Verlag. pp. 87–176. ISBN 978-3-89500-563-3.
  63. ^ a b c Ydema, 1991, p. 9
  64. ^ Beattie, May H. (1972). The Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection of Oriental Rugs (1st ed.). Castagnola: The Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection.
  65. ^ Ydema 1991, p. 19–20
  66. ^ "Ottoman-Cairene carpet in the Met. Museum of Art". Retrieved 27 August 2015.
  67. ^ Pinner, R.; Franses, M. (1981). "East Mediterranean carpets in the Victoria and Albert Museum". Hali. IV (1): 39–40.
  68. ^ Ydema 1991, p. 21–25
  69. ^ "The Sala delle Dame". Hali (200): 208. 2019.
  70. ^ Pinner, Robert; Franses, Michael (1981). "East mediterranean carpets in the Victoria & Albert Museum". Hali. 4 (1): 40.
  71. ^ Ydema 1991, p. 43
  72. ^ "Star Ushak, Metropolitan Museum of Art". Retrieved 11 July 2015.
  73. ^ Tapis - Present de l'orient a l'occident (1st ed.). Paris: L'Institut du Monde Arabe. 1989. p. 4. ISBN 9782906062283.
  74. ^ "Medallion Ushak carpet at the Metropolitan Museum of Art". Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  75. ^ Ydema 1991, p. 39–45
  76. ^ King & Sylvester, 19
  77. ^ Examples in Polish collections led to their being miscalled "Polish carpets" in the 19th century, a misnomer that has stuck: "representations of 'Polish' silk rugs in paintings are rare" report Dimand and Mailey 1973, p.59.
  78. ^ Maurice Dimand and Jean Mailey, Oriental Rugs in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, p. 60, fig.83.
  79. ^ Dimand and Mailey 1973, p 67, illustrating floral Herat rugs in A Visit to the Nursery by Gabriel Metsu (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 17.190.20), p. 67,fig. 94; Portrait of Omer Talon, by Philippe de Champaigne, 1649 (National Gallery of Art, Washington, p.70, fig. 98); Woman with a Water Jug, by Jan Vermeer (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 89.15.21, p.71, fig. 101
  80. ^ Ydema 1991, p. 48–51
  81. ^ Ionescu, Stefano (2005). Antique Ottoman Rugs in Transylvania (PDF) (1st ed.). Rome: Verduci Editore. Retrieved 7 September 2015.
  82. ^ Ydema 1991, p. 51
  83. ^ In the collection of Harvard University Law School; illustrated in Dimand and Mailey 1973, p.193, fig. 178.
  84. ^ King & Sylvester, pp. 22-23
  85. ^ "Pope John Paul II's coffin placed on a Bijar carpet during his funeral mass". The Times. 19 February 2011. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
  86. ^ Gantzhorn, Volkmar (1998). Orientalische Teppiche : eine Darstellung der ikonographischen und ikonologischen Entwicklung von den Anfängen bis zum 18. Jahrhundert [Oriental carpets : Their iconographical and iconological development from the beginnings to the 18th century] (in German). Cologne: Taschen. ISBN 3-8228-0397-9.
  87. ^ a b Rupprich, Hans, ed. (1956). A. Dürer. Schriftlicher Nachlass / Writings (3rd ed.). Berlin: Deutscher Verein für Kunstwissenschaft.
  88. ^ Erdmann, Kurt (1962). Europa und der Orientteppich [Europe and the Oriental Rug] (in German) (1st ed.). Mainz: Florian Kupferberg Verlag. p. 49.
  89. ^ Raby, Julian (1982). Venice, Dürer, and the oriental mode (1. publ. ed.). [S.l.]: Islamic Art Publications. ISBN 978-0856671623.
  90. ^ Westermann, Mariët (2007). A worldly art : the Dutch Republic, 1585-1718 (2nd reprinted ed.). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300107234.
  91. ^ Bergström, Ingvar (1983). Dutch still-life painting in the seventeenth century (Facsim. ed.). New York: Hacker art books. ISBN 978-0878172795.
  92. ^ Vasari, Giorgio (2005). Jacks, Philip Joshua (ed.). The lives of the most excellent painters, sculptors, and architects. Translated by du C. de Vere, Gaston (Pbk. ed.). New York: Modern Library. ISBN 978-0375760365.
  93. ^ . Nationalgallery.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2007-08-26. Retrieved 2013-09-17.
  94. ^ Historic floors by Jane Fawcett p.156

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Brancati, Luca E., 'Figurative Evidence for the Philadelphia Blue-Ground SPH and an Art Historical Case Study: Gaudenzio Ferrari and Sperindio Cagnoli', Oriental Carpet and Textile Studies Vol. V part 1 (1999) 23-29.
  • Brancati, Luca E., 'The carpets of the Painters' Exhibition catalogue, Skira, Milan 1999.
  • Burke, S. Maureen, 'Mary with Her Spools of Thread: Domesticating the Sacred Interior in Tuscan Trecento Art,' in John Garton and Diane Wolfthal, eds., New Studies on Old Masters: Essays in Renaissance Art in Honour of Colin Eisler, Toronto: Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, 2011, 289-307.
  • Mills, John, Carpets in Pictures, The National Gallery, London, 1976. Revised and expanded edition, published as Carpets in Paintings, 1983.
  • Mills, John, 'Early animal carpets in western paintings - a review', HALI. The International Journal of Oriental Carpets and Textiles, Vol.1 no. 3 (1978), 234-43.
  • Mills, John, 'Small-pattern Holbein carpets in western paintings', HALI, Vol. 1 no. 4 (1978), 326-34; 'Three further examples', HALI, Vol. 3 no. 3 (1981), 217.
  • Mills, John, '"Lotto" carpets in western paintings', HALI, Vol. 3 no. 4 (1981), 278-89.
  • Mills, John, 'East Mediterranean carpets in western paintings', HALI, Vol. 4 no.1 (1981), 53-5.
  • Mills, John, 'Near Eastern Carpets in Italian Paintings' in Oriental Carpet and Textile Studies, Vol. II (1986), 109-21.
  • Mills, John, 'The 'Bellini', 'Keyhole', or 'Re-entrant' rugs', HALI, Issue 58 (1991), 86-103, 127-8.
  • Mills, John, 'The animal rugs revisited', Oriental Carpet and Textile Studies Vol. VI (2001), 46-51.
  • Rocella, Valentina, 'Large-Pattern Holbein Carpets in Italian Paintings', Oriental Carpet and Textile Studies Vol. VI (2001), 68-73.
  • Spallanzani Marco, 'Oriental Rugs in Renaissance Florence', The Bruschettini Foundation for Islamic and Asian Art, Genova 2007
  • Born, Robert; Dziewulski, Michael; Messling, Guido, eds. (2015). The Sultan's world: The Ottoman Orient in Renaissance art (1 ed.). Ostfildern, Germany: Hatje Cantz Verlag. ISBN 9783775739665.

External links edit

  • The Carpet Index: The Oriental Carpet in Early Renaissance Paintings

oriental, carpets, renaissance, painting, carpets, middle, eastern, origin, either, from, anatolia, persia, armenia, levant, mamluk, state, egypt, northern, africa, were, used, decorative, features, western, european, paintings, from, 14th, century, onwards, m. Carpets of Middle Eastern origin either from Anatolia Persia Armenia Levant the Mamluk state of Egypt or Northern Africa were used as decorative features in Western European paintings from the 14th century onwards More depictions of Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting survive than actual carpets contemporary with these paintings Few Middle Eastern carpets produced before the 17th century remain though the number of these known has increased in recent decades Therefore comparative art historical research has from its onset in the late 19th century relied on carpets represented in datable European paintings Left image A Bellini type Islamic prayer rug seen from the top at the feet of the Virgin Mary in Gentile Bellini s Madonna and Child Enthroned late 15th century Right image Prayer rug Anatolia late 15th to early 16th century with re entrant keyhole motif See also Islamic influences on Western artLeft image Hans Memling s Still Life with a Jug with Flowers late 15th century Right image Mugan carpet Karabakh school 1 2 late 14th to early 15th century Azerbaijan Carpet Museum 1 Contents 1 Art historical background 2 Origin and limitations of the comparative approach 3 Characteristics 4 Carpet patterns named after artists 4 1 Bellini carpets 4 2 Crivelli carpets 4 3 Memling carpets 4 4 Holbein carpets 4 5 Lotto carpets 4 6 Ghirlandaio carpets 4 7 Van Eyck and Petrus Christus Painted carpets without surviving counterparts 5 Specific carpet types 5 1 Mamluk and Ottoman Cairene carpets 5 2 Chequerboard or Compartment carpets from the 17th century 5 3 Large Ushak star and medallion carpets 5 4 Persian and Anatolian carpets in the 17th century 6 Perception of Oriental carpets during the Renaissance 6 1 Sacred Ground or Christian Oriental Carpets 6 2 Objects of luxury and decoration 6 3 Objects of European self assertion 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksArt historical background edit nbsp Petrus Christus The Virgin and Child Enthroned with Saints Jerome and Francis detail 1457 with a realistic depiction of a pile woven carpet Stadel Museum Frankfurt nbsp Jan van Eyck Lucca Madonna detail c 1430 Stadel Museum Frankfurt Activities of scientists and collectors beginning in the late 19th century have substantially increased the corpus of surviving Oriental carpets allowing for more detailed comparison of existing carpets with their painted counterparts Western comparative research resulted in an ever more detailed cultural history of the Oriental art of carpet weaving This has in turn renewed and inspired the scientific interest in their countries of origin Comparative research based on Renaissance paintings and carpets preserved in museums and collections continues to contribute to the expanding body of art historical and cultural knowledge The tradition of precise realism among Western painters of the late 15th and 16th century provides pictorial material which is often detailed enough to justify conclusions about even minute details of the painted carpet The carpets are treated with exceptional care in the rendering of colors patterns and details of form and design The painted texture of a carpet depicted in Petrus Christus s Virgin and Child the drawing of the individual patterns and motifs and the way the pile opens where the carpet is folded over the steps all suggest that the depicted textile is a pile woven carpet Visually the carpets serve to draw attention either to an important person or to highlight a location where significant action is going on In parallel with the development of Renaissance painting initially mainly Christian saints and religious scenes are set out on the carpets Later on the carpets were integrated into secular contexts but always served to represent the idea of opulence exoticism luxury wealth or status First their use was reserved for the most powerful and most wealthy for royalty and nobility Later as more people gained sufficient wealth to afford goods of luxury Oriental carpets appeared on the portraits of merchants and wealthy burghers During the late 17th and 18th century the interest in depicting carpets declined In parallel the paintings pay less attention to detail The richly designed Oriental carpets appealed strongly to Western painters The rich and various colours may have influenced the great Venetian painters of the Quattrocento 3 It has been suggested that the pictorial representation of carpets is linked to the development of the linear perspective 4 which was first described by Leon Battista Alberti in 1435 5 The depiction of Oriental carpets in Renaissance paintings is regarded as an important contribution to a world history of art based upon interactions of different cultural traditions 6 Rugs from the Islamic world arrived in large numbers in Western Europe by the 15th century which is increasingly recognized as a pivotal temporal nexus in the cultural encounters that contributed to the development of Renaissance ideas arts and sciences Intensified contacts especially the increasing trade between the Islamic world and Western Europe have provided material sources and cultural influences to Western artists during the next centuries to come In turn European market demands also affected the carpet production in their countries of origin 3 Origin and limitations of the comparative approach editIn 1871 Julius Lessing published his book on Oriental carpet design He was relying more on European paintings than on the examination of actual carpets for lack of material because ancient Oriental carpets were not yet collected at the time when he worked on his book 7 Lessing s approach has proven very useful to establish a scientific chronology of Oriental carpet weaving and was further elaborated and expanded mainly by scholars of the Berlin school of History of Islamic art Wilhelm von Bode and his successors Friedrich Sarre Ernst Kuhnel and Kurt Erdmann developed the ante quem method for the dating of oriental carpets based on Renaissance paintings These art historians were also aware of the fact that their scientific approach was biased Only carpets produced by manufactories were exported to Western Europe and consequently were available to the Renaissance artists 8 Village or nomadic rugs did not reach Europe during the Renaissance and were not depicted in paintings Not until the mid twentieth century when collectors like Joseph V McMullan or James F Ballard recognized the artistic and art historic value of village or nomadic carpets were they appreciated in the Western World Characteristics edit nbsp nbsp Left image Domenico di Bartolo s The Marriage of the Foundlings features a large carpet with a Chinese inspired phoenix and dragon pattern 1440 9 Right image Phoenix and dragon carpet first half or middle of the 15th century Berlin 9 10 nbsp nbsp Left image Lippo Memmi s Virgin Mary and Child features an animal carpet with two opposed birds besides a tree 1340 50 Right image Anatolian animal carpet circa 1500 found in Marby Church Sweden Pile carpets with geometric design are known to have been produced from the 13th century among the Seljuks of Rum in eastern Anatolia whom Venice had had commercial relations since 1220 11 The Medieval trader and traveler Marco Polo himself mentioned that the carpets produced at Konya were the best in the world et ibi fiunt soriani et tapeti pulchriores de mundo et pulchrioris coloris and here they make the most beautiful silks and carpets in the world and with the most beautiful colours 12 Carpets were also produced in Islamic Spain and one is shown in a fresco of the 1340s in the Palais des Papes Avignon 13 The vast majority of carpets in 15th and 16th century paintings are either from the Ottoman Empire or possibly European copies of these types from the Balkans Spain or elsewhere In fact these were not the finest Islamic carpets of the period and few of the top quality Turkish court carpets are seen Even finer than these Persian carpets do not appear until the end of the 16th century but become increasingly popular among the very wealthy in the 17th century The very refined Mamluk carpets from Egypt are occasionally seen mostly in Venetian paintings 14 One of the first uses of an Oriental carpet in a European painting is Simone Martini s Saint Louis of Toulouse Crowning Robert of Anjou King of Naples painted in 1316 1319 15 Another Anatolian animal carpet appears in a c 1340 45 Sienese panel of the Holy Family attributed to Pietro or Ambrogio Lorenzetti Abegg Stiftung Riggisberg with alternating black and white animals within colorful octagonal medallions 16 European depictions of Oriental carpets were extremely faithful to the originals judging by comparison with the few surviving examples of actual rugs of contemporary date Their larger scale also allows more detailed and accurate depictions than those shown in miniature paintings from Turkey or Persia Most carpets use Islamic geometric designs with the earliest ones also using animal patterns such as the originally Chinese inspired phoenix and dragon as in Domenico di Bartolo s Marriage of the Foundlings 1440 These had been stylised and simplified into near geometric motifs in their transmission to the Islamic world 17 The whole group referred to in the literature as animal rugs disappeared from paintings by about the end of the 15th century Only a handful of original animal pattern carpets survive two from European churches where their rarity presumably preserved them 18 The Marby rug one of the finest examples was preserved in a church of the Swedish town of Marby and a bold adaptation of an originally Chinese dragon and phoenix motif is in Berlin Both are rugs less than 2 metres long and about 1 metre wide with two compartments though the Berlin carpet lacks a border down one long side 19 The Dragon and Phoenix and the Marby rugs were the only existing examples of animal carpets known until 1988 Since then seven more carpets of this type have been found They survived in Tibetan monasteries and were removed by monks fleeing to Nepal during the Chinese cultural revolution One of these carpets was acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art 20 which parallels a painting by the Sienese artist Gregorio di Cecco The Marriage of the Virgin 1423 21 It shows large confronted animals each with a smaller animal inside Although the carpets were displayed on a public floor in a few examples most carpets on the floor are in an area reserved for the main protagonists very often on a dais or in front of an altar or down steps in front of the Virgin Mary or saints or rulers 22 in the manner of a modern red carpet This presumably reflected the contemporary practice of royalty in Denmark the 16th century Persian Coronation Carpet is used under the throne for coronations to this day They are also often hung over balustrades or out of windows for festive occasions such as the processions through Venice shown by Vittore Carpaccio or Gentile Bellini see gallery 23 when Carpaccio s St Ursula embarks they are hung over the sides of boats and footbridges 24 Oriental carpets were often depicted as a decorative element in religious scenes and were a symbol of luxury status and taste 25 although they were becoming more widely available throughout the period which is reflected in the paintings In some cases such as paintings by Gentile Bellini the carpets reflect an early Orientalist interest but for most painters they merely reflect the prestige of the carpets in Europe A typical example is the Turkish carpet at the feet of the Virgin Mary in the 1456 1459 San Zeno Altarpiece by Andrea Mantegna see detail 26 Non royal portrait sitters were more likely to place their carpet on a table or other piece of furniture especially in Northern Europe though small rugs beside a bed are not uncommon as in the Arnolfini Portrait of 1434 27 Carpets are seen on tables in particular in Italian scenes showing the Calling of Matthew when he was engaged in his work as a tax collector 28 and the life of Saint Eligius who was a goldsmith Both are shown sitting doing business at a carpet covered table or shop counter The Oriental carpets used in Italian Renaissance painting had various geographical origins designated in contemporary Italy by different names the cagiarini Mamluk design from Egypt the damaschini Damascus region the barbareschi North Africa the rhodioti probably imported through Rome the turcheschi Ottoman Empire and the simiscasa Circassian or Caucasian 29 Some of the prayer carpets represented in Christian religious paintings are Islamic prayer rugs with such motifs as the mihrab or the Kaaba the so called re entrant carpets later called the Bellini type 30 The representation of such prayer rugs disappeared after 1555 probably as a consequence of the realization of their religious meaning and connection to Islam 31 The depiction of Oriental carpets in paintings other than portraits generally declined after the 1540s corresponding to a decline in the taste for highly detailed representation of objects Detailism among painters 32 and grander classicising surrounds for hieratic religious images Carpet patterns named after artists edit nbsp nbsp Left image Lorenzo Lotto s Husband and Wife 1523 with a Bellini carpet showing the keyhole re entrant motif Right image Re entrant prayer rug Anatolia late 15th to early 16th century nbsp nbsp Left image Carlo Crivelli s Annunciation with St Emidius 1486 with Crivelli carpet in the upper left corner See enlarged detail at left Note that there is a second different carpet at top center Right image Crivelli carpet Anatolia late 15th early 16th century When Western scholars explored the history of Islamic carpetmaking several types of carpet pattern became conventionally called after the names of European painters who had used them and these terms remain in use The classification is mostly that of Kurt Erdmann once Director of the Museum fur Islamische Kunst Berlin and the leading carpet scholar of his day Some of these types ceased to be produced several centuries ago and the location of their production remains uncertain so obvious alternative terms were not available The classification ignores the border patterns and distinguishes between the type size and arrangement of gul or larger motifs in the central field of the carpet In addition to four types of Holbein carpets 33 there are Bellini carpets Crivellis Memlings and Lotto carpets 34 These names are somewhat random many artists painted these types and single artists often painted many types of carpets Bellini carpets edit Both Giovanni Bellini and his brother Gentile who visited Istanbul in 1479 painted examples of prayer rugs with a single re entrant or keyhole motif at the bottom of a larger figure traced in a thin border At the top end the borders close diagonally to a point from which hangs down a lamp The design had Islamic significance and its function seems to have been recognised in Europe as they were known in English as musket carpets a corruption of mosque 35 In the Gentile Bellini seen at top the rug is the right way round often this is not the case Later Ushak prayer rugs where both ends have the diagonal pointed inner border as at the top only of Bellini rugs are sometimes known as Tintoretto rugs though this term is not as commonly used as the others mentioned here 36 Crivelli carpets edit Carlo Crivelli twice painted what seems to be the same small rug with the centre taken up with a complex sixteen pointed star motif made up of several compartments in different colours some containing highly stylised animal motifs Comparable actual carpets are extremely rare but there are two in Budapest 37 The Annunciation of 1482 in the Stadel museum in Frankfurt shows it at the top and the same carpet seems to be used in the Annunciation with Saint Emidius in the National Gallery London 1486 which shows the type hung over a balcony to the top left and a different type of carpet over another balcony in the right foreground These seem to be a transitional type between the early animal pattern carpets and later purely geometrical designs such as the Holbein types perhaps reflecting increased Ottoman enforcement of Islamic aniconism 38 Memling carpets edit nbsp nbsp Left image yellow Oriental carpet in Hans Memling altarpiece of 1488 1490 The hooked motif defines a Memling carpet 39 Louvre Museum Right image Konya 18th century carpet with Memling gul design These are named after Hans Memling who painted several examples of what may have been Armenian carpets in the last quarter of the fifteenth century and are characterised by several lines coming off the motifs that end in hooks by coiling in on themselves through two or three 90 turns Another example appears in a miniature painted for Rene of Anjou about 1460 40 41 Holbein carpets edit Main article Holbein carpet nbsp nbsp Left image Unknown painter The Somerset House Conference with a small pattern Holbein carpet Right image Small pattern Holbein carpet Anatolia 16th century These in fact are seen in paintings from many decades earlier than Holbein and are sub divided into four types of which Holbein actually only painted two they are the commonest designs of Anatolian rug seen in Western Renaissance paintings and continued to be produced for a long period All are purely geometric and use a variety of arrangements of lozenges crosses and octagonal motifs within the main field The sub divisions are between 42 Type I Small pattern Holbein This type is defined by an infinite repeat of small patterns with alternating rows of octagons and staggered rows of diamonds as seen in Holbein the Younger s Portrait of Georg Gisze 1532 or the Somerset House Conference 1608 43 44 Type II now more often called Lotto carpets see below Type III Large pattern Holbein The motifs in the field inside the border consist of one or two large squares filled with octagons placed regularly and separated from each other and from the borders by narrow stripes There are no secondary gul motifs The carpet in Holbein s The Ambassadors is of this type 45 46 Type IV Large pattern Holbein Large square star filled compartments are combined with secondary smaller squares containing octagons or other gul motifs In contrast to the other types which only contain patterns of equal scale the type IV Holbein shows subordinate ornaments of unequal scale 47 48 Lotto carpets edit Main article Lotto carpet nbsp nbsp Left image The Alms of St Anthony by Lorenzo Lotto 1542 with two magnificent Oriental carpets the one in the foreground the type for the Lotto carpet the other a para Mamluk 49 Right image Western Anatolia knotted wool Lotto carpet 16th century Saint Louis Art Museum These were previously known as small pattern Holbein Type II but he never painted one unlike Lorenzo Lotto who did so several times though he was not the first artist to show them Lotto is also documented as owning a large carpet though its pattern is unknown They were primarily produced during the 16th and 17th centuries along the Aegean coast of Anatolia but also copied in various parts of Europe including Spain England and Italy They are characterized by a lacy arabesque usually in yellow on a red ground often with blue details 50 Though they look very different from Holbein Type I carpets they are a development of the type where the edges of the motifs nearly always in yellow on a red ground take off in rigid arabesques somewhat suggesting foliage and terminating in branched palmettes The type was common and long lasting and is also known as Arabesque Ushak 51 To judge from paintings they reached Italy by 1516 Portugal about a decade later and northern Europe including England by the 1560s They continue to appear in paintings until about the 1660s especially in the Netherlands 50 Ghirlandaio carpets edit nbsp Domenico Ghirlandaio Madonna and Child enthroned with Saint circa 1483 nbsp West Anatolian Ghirlandaio rug late 17th century A carpet closely related to the 1483 painting by Domenico Ghirlandaio was found by A Boralevi in the Evangelical church Halchiu Heldsdorf in Transylvania attributed to Western Anatolia and dated to the late 15th century 52 The general design of the Ghirlandaio type as in the 1486 painting is related to Holbein Type 1 It is defined by one or two central medallions of diamond shape consisting of an octagon within a square from whose sides triangular curvilinear patterns arise Carpets with this medallion have been woven in the Western Anatolian region of Canakkale since the 16th century 53 A carpet fragment with a Ghirlandaio medallion was found in the Divrigi Great Mosque and dated to the 16th century Carpets with similar medallions were dated to the 17th 54 55 18th 56 and 19th 57 58 century respectively and are still woven in the Canakkale region today In his essay on Centralized Designs Thompson 59 relates the central medallion pattern of oriental carpets to the lotus pedestal and cloud collar yun chien motifs used in the art of Buddhist Asia The origin of the design thus dates back to pre Islamic times probably Yuan time China Bruggemann and Boehmer further elaborate that it might have been introduced to Western Anatolia by the Seljuk or Mongol invaders in the 11th or 13th century 60 In contrast to the manifold variation of patterns seen in other carpet types the Ghirlandaio medallion design has remained largely unaltered from the 15th to the 21st century and thus exemplifies an unusual continuity of a woven carpet design within a specific region Van Eyck and Petrus Christus Painted carpets without surviving counterparts edit The Netherlandish painters Jan van Eyck in his Paele Madonna Lucca Madonna and the Dresden Triptych and Petrus Christus in his Virgin and Child Enthroned with Saints Jerome and Francis have painted four different carpets three of them of a similar design By the realism of the depictions these are pile woven carpets No directly comparable carpets have survived 61 The carpet pattern depicted on van Eyck s Paele Madonna could be traced back to late Roman origins and related to early Islamic floor mosaics found in the Umayyad palace of Khirbat al Mafjar 62 Similar but not identical carpets appear in the Lucca Madonna Dresden triptych and Virgin and Child with Saints paintings which show a predominantly geometric design with a lozenge composition in infinite repeat built up from fine bands which connect eight pointed stars Yetkin has identified an Anatolian carpet with a similar but more advanced lozenge design Yetkin 1981 plate 47 53 in the Mevlana Museum Konya dated to the 17th century She relates these carpets to 19th century Caucasian Dragon rugs with a similar lozenge design p 71 53 and claims that carpets of a type as depicted by van Eyck and Petrus Christus are early Anatolian forerunners to the later Caucasian design The main borders of the carpets in the Paele and Lucca Madonna as well as in Virgin and Child with Saints however each show a non Oriental undulating trefoil stem 63 Similar ornaments can be found in the borders of many carpets in Early Netherlandish paintings from the 15th to the beginning of the 16th century 63 The fringes of these carpets are often found at the sides of the painted carpets not at the upper and lower ends Either did the carpets have an uncommonly square shape or maybe the artists have used some license and improvised with the authentic models Alternatively the carpets depicted by van Eyck and Petrus Christus could be of Western European manufacture The undulating trefoil design is a well known feature of Western Gothic ornament 63 Specific carpet types editMamluk and Ottoman Cairene carpets edit From the middle of the 15th century onwards a type of carpet was produced in Egypt which is characterized by a dominant central medallion or three to five medallions in a row along the vertical axis Numerous smaller ornaments are placed around the medallions such as eight pointed stars or small ornaments composed of stylized floral elements The innumerable small geometric and floral ornaments give a kaleidoscopic impression Sixty of these carpets were given to the English cardinal Thomas Wolsey in exchange for a license for Venetian merchants to import wine to England 64 The earliest known painting representing a Mamluk carpet is Giovanni Bellinis Portrait of the Doge of Venice Loredan and his four advisers from 1507 A French master depicted The Three De Coligny brothers in 1555 Another representation can be found on Ambrosius Frankens The Last Supper about 1570 The large medallion is depicted in a way that it forms the nimbus of the head of Christ The characteristic Mamluk carpet ornaments are clearly visible Ydema has documented a total of sixteen dateable representations of Mamluk carpets 65 After the 1517 Ottoman conquest of the Mamluk Sultanate in Egypt two different cultures merged as is seen on Mamluk carpets woven after this date After the conquest of Egypt the Cairene weavers adopted an Ottoman Turkish design 66 The production of these carpets continued in Egypt into the early 17th century 67 A carpet of the Ottoman Cairene type is depicted in Ludovicus Finsonius painting The Annunciation Its border design and guard borders are the same as a carpet in the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam 68 A similar carpet has been depicted by Adriaen van der Venne in Geckie met de Kous 1630 Peter Paul Rubens and Jan Brueghel the Elders Christ in the House of Mary and Martha 1628 shows the characteristic S stems ending in double sickle shaped lancet leaves Various carpets of the Ottoman Cairene type are depicted in Moretto da Brescias frescoes in the Sala delle Dame at the Palazzo Salvadego in Brescia Italy 69 nbsp The Baillet Latour Mamluk carpet Cairo early 16th century nbsp Ambrosius Francken The Last Supper 16th century Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp with an Egyptian Mamluk carpet nbsp Ottoman carpet Probably Cairo Egypt First half of the 17th century nbsp Louis Finson The Annunciation 17th century Museo del Prado depicting an Ottoman Cairene carpet nbsp Ottoman Cairene carpet 16th century Museum fur angewandte Kunst Frankfurt St 136 nbsp Christ in the House of Martha and Mary 1628 Jan Bruegel and Peter Paul Rubens National Gallery of Ireland depicting an Ottoman Cairene carpet Chequerboard or Compartment carpets from the 17th century edit An extremely rare group of carpets chequerboard carpets were assumed to be a later and derivative continuum of the Mamluk and Ottoman Cairene group of carpets Only about 30 of these carpets survived They are distinguished by their design composed of rows of squares with triangles in each corner enclosing a star pattern All chequerboard carpets have borders with cartouches and lobed medallions Their attribution is still under debate The colours and patterns resemble those seen in Mamluk carpets however they are S spun and Z twisted and thus similar to early Armenian carpets Since the early days of carpet science they are attributed to Damascus Pinner and Franses champion this attribution because Syria was part first of the Mamluk later of the Ottoman Empire at that time This would explain the similarities with the colours and patterns of the Cairene carpets 70 The current dating of the chequerboard carpets is also consistent with European collection inventories from the early 17th century Carpets of the chequerboard type are depicted on Pietro Paolinis 1603 1681 Self portrait as well as on Gabriel Metsus painting The musical party Large Ushak star and medallion carpets edit In contrast to the relatively large number of surviving carpets of this type relatively few of them are represented in Renaissance paintings 71 Star Ushak carpets were often woven in large formats As such they represent a typical product of higher organized town manufacture They are characterized by large dark blue star shaped primary medallions in infinite repeat on a red ground field containing a secondary floral scroll The design was likely influenced by northwest Persian book design or by Persian carpet medallions 72 As compared to the medallion Ushak carpets the concept of the infinite repeat in star Ushak carpets is more accentuated and in keeping with the early Turkish design tradition 73 Because of their strong allusion to the infinite repeat the star Ushak design can be used on carpets of various size and in many varying dimensions Medallion Ushak carpets usually have a red or blue field decorated with a floral trellis or leaf tendrils ovoid primary medallions alternating with smaller eight lobed stars or lobed medallions intertwined with floral tracery Their border frequently contains palmettes on a floral and leaf scroll and pseudo kufic characters 74 The best known representation of a Medallion Ushak was painted in 1656 by Vermeer in his painting The Procuress It is placed horizontally the upper or lower end with the star shaped corner medallion can be seen Under the woman s hand which holds the glass a part of a characteristic Ushak medallion can be seen The carpet seen on Vermeer s The Music Lesson Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window and The Concert hardly show any differences in the details of the design or the weaving structure indicate that all three pictures might trace back to one single carpet Vermeer might have had at his studio The paintings by Vermeer Steen and Verkolje depict a special type of Ushak carpet of which no surviving counterpart is known It is characterized by its rather sombre colours coarse weaving and patterns with a more degenerated curvilinear design 75 nbsp Paris Bordone Presentation of the ring to the Doge of Venice 1534 The only depiction of a large Star Ushak carpet with eight pointed star medallions nbsp Johannes Vermeer The Music Lesson detail 1662 5 Buckingham Palace nbsp Johannes Vermeer The Concert 1663 6 stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Boston in 1990 nbsp Jan and Nikolaas Verkolje Portrait of Willem de Vlamingh 1690 1700 Persian and Anatolian carpets in the 17th century edit nbsp nbsp Left image Pieter de Hooch Portrait of a family making music 1663 Cleveland Museum of Art Right image Transylvanian type prayer rug 17th century National Museum Warsaw Carpets remained an important way of enlivening the background of full length portraits throughout the 16th and 17th centuries for example in the English portraits of William Larkin 76 The finely knotted silk carpets woven in the time of Shah Abbas I at Kashan and Isfahan are rarely represented in paintings as they were doubtless very unusual in European homes 77 however A Lady playing the Theorbo by Gerard Terborch Metropolitan Museum of Art 14 40 617 shows such a carpet laid upon the table on which the lady s cavalier is sitting 78 Floral Isfahan carpets of the Herat type on the other hand were exported in great numbers to Portugal Spain and the Netherlands and are often represented in interiors painted by Velasquez Rubens Van Dyck Vermeer Terborch de Hooch Bol and Metsu where the dates established for the paintings provide a yardstick for establishing the chronology of the designs 79 Anthony van Dyck s royal and aristocratic subjects had mostly progressed to Persian carpets but less wealthy sitters are still shown with the Turkish types The 1620 Portrait of Abraham Graphaeus by Cornelis de Vos and Thomas de Keyser s Portrait of an unknown man 1626 and Portrait of Constantijn Huyghens and his clerk 1627 are amongst the earliest paintings depicting a new type of Ottoman Turkish manufactory carpet which was exported to Europe in large quantities probably in order to meet the increasing demand A large number of similar carpets were preserved in Transylvania which was an important center of Armenian carpet trade during the 15th 19th century Many Armenians left their homes in Western Armenia ruled by Ottoman Turkey and founded craft centers of carpet weaving in Gherla Transylvania Hence carpets of this type are known by a term of convenience as Transylvanian carpets 80 81 Pieter de Hoochs 1663 painting Portrait of a family making music depicts an Ottoman prayer rug of the Transylvanian type 82 In the American colonies Isaac Royall and his family were painted by Robert Feke in 1741 posed round a table spread with a Bergama rug 83 From the mid century European direct trade with India brought Mughal versions of Persian patterns to Europe Painters of the Dutch Golden Age showed their skill by depiction of light effects on table carpets like Vermeer in his Music Lesson Royal Collection By this date they have become common in the homes of the reasonably well to do as is shown by historical documentation of inventories Carpets are sometimes depicted in scenes of debauchery from the prosperous Netherlands 84 By the end of the century Oriental carpets had lost much of their status as prestige objects and the grandest sitters for portraits were more likely to be shown on the high quality Western carpets like Savonneries now being produced whose less intricate patterns were also easier to depict in a painterly manner A number of Orientalist European painters continued to accurately depict Oriental carpets now usually in Oriental settings nbsp William Larkin s Dorothy Cary later Viscountess Rochford 1614 8 Kenwood House Anatolian animal stype carpet with a more developed design 53 nbsp Portrait of Abraham Grapheus by Cornelis de Vos 1620 Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp nbsp Thomas de Keyser Portrait of Constantijn Huygens and his clerk 1627 National Gallery nbsp Philip Herbert 4th Earl of Pembroke with his Family by Anthony van Dyck whose sitters had mostly moved on to Persian carpetsPerception of Oriental carpets during the Renaissance edit nbsp At the top detail of the Virgin s mantle hem in Antonio Vivarini s Saint Louis de Toulouse 1450 At the bottom detail of the Virgin s mantle hem in Jacopo Bellini s Virgin of Humility 1440 Louvre Museum The perception of Oriental carpets during the Renaissance is characterized by three main aspects Due to their perceived rarity preciousness and strangeness Oriental carpets were depicted as a background for saints and religious scenes Later on the religious iconography was taken over by politically powerful persons in order to assert their status and power Oriental carpets were more generally perceived as a rare commodity and objects of luxury and decoration From the mid 16th century onwards the iconological context sometimes extended towards the idea of profligacy or vanity When contacts often of a violent nature grew closer between the Islamic world and Europe Oriental carpets were sometimes used as a symbol of Christian self assertion In any case Oriental carpets were used in Western Europe in different ways and contexts than in the Islamic world and their original cultural context was never fully understood 6 Sacred Ground or Christian Oriental Carpets edit Oriental carpets appear for the first time on early Renaissance paintings of the late 12th century In most cases the carpets serve as a background for religious scenes Saints were depicted enthroned or standing on carpets thus being elated and separated from their surroundings Ordinary people often the donors of the painting were sometimes allowed to participate in the atmosphere of holiness by depicting them near the holy person or literally kneeling or standing on the same carpet as the saint This context is still understood and at times used today 85 The exact interpretation of the religious context has been proposed by Volkmar Gantzhorn in 1998 He compared in detail the patterns and symbols of both the Renaissance paintings and surviving carpets with ancient ornaments for example with Armenian illuminated manuscripts He concluded that the majority of the surviving and painted carpets alike were produced by Christian Armenian weavers The hidden Christian symbolism of the carpet patterns had therefore made the so called Christian oriental carpets appropriate adornments for Western European Christian churches Following this hypothesis the lack of contemporary Western European written sources which could otherwise provide independent evidence to support Gantzhorn s claims is explained by the fact that the knowledge of the hidden symbols was subject to oral tradition and restricted to a small religious elite The Armenian genocide had led to the loss of the oral tradition and subsequently to an incorrect Islamic attribution of the carpets by the majority of Western art historians 86 The debate about Gantzhorn s hypotheses which is at times conducted polemically and not entirely free of nationalistic constraints is still ongoing And it s high time to announce the real story of rugs carpets to the world and present the first ancient rug found in Pazyryk as an ancient Armenian rag woven by fine and talented Armenian masters in the 5th century BC When chemists and dye specialists of the Hermitage Museum examined the Pazyryk carpet for various substances it has been concluded that the red threads used in the carpet were colored with a dye made from the Armenian cochineal which was anciently found on the Ararat plains Moreover the technique used to create the Pazyryk carpet is consistent with the Armenian double knot technique Objects of luxury and decoration edit nbsp Carpets displayed over windows for a procession in Venice Detail by Vittore Carpaccio 1507 We do not understand exactly how Renaissance artists thought about the Oriental carpets they were depicting We know that the Venetian Piazza San Marco was adorned with carpets hanging from the windows of the surrounding palaces and houses on special occasions Like the beautiful ladies looking out of the windows the carpets function as a decorative framework and highlight the important action which is going on Similar to the inaccurate pseudo kufic writing in contemporary paintings the European artists borrowed something from another culture which they essentially did not understand 6 nbsp Jan Steen The way you hear it circa 1665 Mauritshuis nbsp Simon de Vos Merrymakers in an Inn 1630 9 Walters Art Museum nbsp Pieter Boel Still life with globe and parrot circa 1658 In a series of letters 87 from Venice dated 18 August 13 October 1506 88 the German painter Albrecht Durer tells his friend Willibald Pirckheimer about his efforts to buy two carpets for him in Venice Vnd dy 2 tebich will mir Anthoni Kolb awff daz hubschpt preytest vnd wolfeillest helfen khawffen So jch sy hab will jch sy dem jungen Im Hoff geben daz er ys ewch einschlache Awch will jch sehen noch den kranchs federen Anthoni Kolb will help me buying 2 carpets the nicest broadest and cheapest we can get As soon as I have them I will hand them over to the young Im Hoff and he will prepare them for transport I will look for crane feathers as well 18 August 1506 Jtem allen fleis hab jch an kertt mit den tewichen kan aber kein preiten an kumen Sy sind al schmall vnd lang Aber noch hab jch altag forschung dornoch awch der Anthoni Kolb I ve done all I could with the carpets but I cannot get any of the broad ones They are all narrow and oblong I m continuing my search every day Anthoni Kolb as well 8 September 1506 Jch hab awch zwen dewich bestelt dy wurd jch morgen tzalen Aber jch hab sy nit wolfell kunen kawffen I ve ordered two carpets and will pay for them tomorrow But I could not buy at a cheap price 13 October 1506 Albrecht Durer letters from Venice to Willibald Pirckheimer 87 Durer was buying various exotic luxury goods for Pirckheimer in Venice and he mentions the two carpets amongst gold jewels and crane feathers We do not know if Durer in any way attributed artistic value to these carpets No Oriental carpets were ever depicted by Durer 89 A very common type of genre painting of the Dutch Golden Age and Flemish Baroque the so called Merry Company type of painting depicts a group of people enjoying themselves usually seated with drinks and often music making In these pictures Oriental carpets often cover and decorate the table or are spread over the furniture As such they either underline the wealth and respectability of the portrayed or add a context of exoticism and profligacy to brothel scenes or scenes of debauchery 90 By the 16th century Oriental carpets were often depicted in still life paintings Assorted valuable exotic objects like Chinese porcelain bowls and animals like parrots are depicted often with an allegorical meaning or symbolizing vanitas the futility of human life The allusion to futility is made apparent by the inclusion of symbols like a human skull or inscriptions quoting the biblical book of Ecclesiastes 1 2 12 8 As early as 1533 Hans Holbein s painting The Ambassadors prominently shows an anamorphic projection of a human skull Objects in still life paintings regardless of their allegorical meaning are often placed on precious velvet table cloths marble plates or Oriental carpets As such Oriental carpets are treated similar to other precious objects or materials the focus being on their material value and decorative effect 91 Objects of European self assertion edit nbsp Portrait of Sultan Mehmet II by Gentile Bellini Victoria and Albert Museum London In September 1479 the Venetian painter Gentile Bellini was sent by the Venetian Senate as a cultural ambassador to Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror s new Ottoman capital Constantinople as part of the peace settlement between Venice and the Turks Vasari wrote that Bellini portrayed the Emperor Mahomet from the life so well that it was held a miracle 92 The dating and authorship of the portrait by Bellini have been placed in question 93 however Bellini is the first great Renaissance painter who actually visited an Islamic Sultan s court The influence of Bellinis encounter with the Islamic world is reflected by Oriental motifs appearing in several of his paintings His 1507 St Mark Preaching at Alexandria anachronistically shows the patron saint of Venice preaching to Muslims The architecture shown in the background is an incongruous assortment of buildings not corresponding to contemporary Islamic architecture The stage like setting for St Mark s sermon is adorned by exotic animals like a camel and a giraffe as well as architectural elements like an ancient Egyptian obelisk in the background 6 Bellini s use of these decorative elements resembles the way Oriental carpets are depicted in 14th and 15th century Renaissance paintings They are depictions of the exotic and the precious they set a stage for an important person or action but as yet essentially ignore their original cultural context nbsp Ambrosius Francken The Last Supper 16th century Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp with an Egyptian Mamluk carpet The 1547 depiction of King Edward VI of England standing on an Oriental carpet in front of a throne on the same carpet asserts the young fidei defensor s strength and power by a deliberate echo of the pose of his father s famous portrait by Holbein Nothing is known about how much Ambrosius Francken knew about the cultural background of the Mamluk carpet which he used as a decoration for his Last Supper The painting can only be roughly dated to the 16th century The use of the central medallion of an Oriental carpet to highlight the nimbus of Christ however represents a special case The use of the motif could either have resulted from a mere similarity of the two pictorial patterns but it can also be understood as an assertion of Renaissance Christian predominance Europeans had reasons to fear the Islamic world in 1529 Suleiman the Magnificent was besieging Vienna and the Ottoman Empire remained a constant threat to Western Europe until the late 17th century In his 1502 9 cycle of the Piccolomini library frescoes at the Dome of Siena Pinturicchio depicts Pope Pius II convoking as the Latin inscription explains a Diet of Princes at Mantua to proclaim a new crusade in 1459 On the eighth fresco a table in front of the Pope s throne is covered by an Oriental carpet It was hypothesized that the carpet might have been a trophy from previous expeditions 6 Precious Oriental carpets were part of the so called Turkenbeute lit Turkish loot from the siege of Vienna which ended on 12 September 1683 and their new Christian owners proudly reported back home about their plunder Carpets exist with inscriptions indicating the new owner and the date when it was acquired A D Wilkonski XII septembris 1683 z pod Wiednia A D Wilkonski Vienna 12 September 1683 Inscription on the backside of an Oriental Polonaise carpet once in the Moore collection current location unknown 3 The majority of Oriental carpets however continue to be depicted as objects with visual appeal without political connotations but ignoring their original cultural context It was reserved to a later century to try and reach out for a better understanding of the carpets within their Islamic cultural context Whilst Islamic carpets initially served to adorn Renaissance paintings later on the paintings contributed to a better understanding of the carpets Comparative art historical research on Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting thus adds another facette and leads to a better understanding of the highly multifaceted and sometimes ambivalent image of the Ottomans during the Western European Renaissance nbsp Gentile Bellini St Mark Preaching in Alexandria c 1507 nbsp Henry VIII standing on a star Ushak carpet workshop copy of Hans Holbein the Younger c 1530 94 nbsp Edward VI standing on a Holbein carpet c 1547 nbsp Pinturicchio Pius II convokes a Diet of Princes at Mantua to proclaim a new crusade in 1459 Fresco at the Duomo di Siena Piccolomini Library 1502 9 Notes edit a b Lyatif Kerimov Azerbajdzhanskij kovyor Tom III VI Karabahskaya shkola B Dzhebrailskaya gruppa B Gyandzhlik 1983 ris 121 Azerbaijani carpets Karabakh group Azerbaijan Carpet Museum page 124 125 Accessed 28 07 2013 a b c Erdmann Kurt 1970 Erdmann Hannah ed Seven Hundred Years of Oriental Carpets Translated by Beattie May H Herzong Hildegard Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 9780520018167 Bier Carol 2010 From grid to projected grid Oriental carpets and the development of linear perspective Proceedings of the Textile Society of America 12th Biennal Symposium Retrieved 27 August 2015 Alberti Leon Battista 2011 Sinisgalli Rocco ed On painting a new translation and critical edition 1 publ ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107000629 a b c d e Carrier David 2008 A world art history and its objects University Park Pa Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0271034157 Lessing Julius 1877 Altorientalische Teppichmuster Nach Bildern und Originalen des XV XVI Jahrhunderts translated into English asAncient Oriental Carpet Patterns after Pictures and Originals of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries London H Sotheran amp Co 1879 Berlin a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Erdmann Kurt 1977 Pinner R Editorial to The history of the early Turkish carpet by K Erdmann 1977 English ed of the original 1957 German ed London Oguz Pr ISBN 9780905820026 a b Mack p 75 King amp Sylvester 49 Mack p 74 Marsden William 2010 Wright Thomas ed Travels of Marco Polo the Venetian the translation of Marsden revised S l Bibliobazaar Llc p 28 ISBN 978 1142126261 King amp Sylvester 10 11 King amp Sylvester 17 Mack p 74 75 Image Burke S Maureen 2011 Mary with Her Spools of Thread Domesticating the Sacred Interior in Tuscan Trecento Art in John Garton and Diane Wolfthal eds New Studies on Old Masters Essays in Renaissance Art in Honour of Colin Eisler Toronto Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies p 295 Mack p 75 King amp Sylvester pp 13 and 49 50 King amp Sylvester pp 49 50 King amp Sylvester 49 50 Animal carpet at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 12 July 2015 National Gallery London National Gallery London NG 1317 Retrieved 12 July 2015 Mack p 76 King amp Sylvester p 14 Carpaccio image Mack p 73 93 Mack p 67 King amp Sylvester p 20 King amp Sylvester 14 Mack p 77 Mack p 84 King amp Sylvester p 58 Mack p 85 Mack p 90 Old Turkish carpets website King amp Sylvester King and Sylvester pp 14 16 56 58 King amp Sylvester 78 One shown here about a third of the way down the page King amp Sylvester pp 14 26 57 58 Campbell p 189 National Gallery zoomable image Archived 2009 05 07 at the Wayback Machine There is a different type of carpet hung from the Virgin s house at top center right King and Sylvester p 57 Todd Richardson Plague Weather and Wool AuthorHouse 2009 p 182 344 ISBN 1 4389 5187 6 ISBN 978 1 4389 5187 4 King and Sylvester pp 56 57 King amp Sylvester pp 26 27 52 57 Campbell p 189 Old Ottoman carpets see also last note Erdmann Kurt 1965 Der Orientalische Knupfteppich Oriental Carpets An Essay on their History tr C G Ellis New York 1960 3rd ed Tubingen Verlag Ernst Wasmuth p 23 Old Ottoman carpets Large pattern Type III Holbein Carpets See also note to the last paragraph Erdmann Kurt 1965 Der Orientalische Knupfteppich Oriental Carpets An Essay on their History tr C G Ellis New York 1960 3rd ed Tubingen Verlag Ernst Wasmuth p 25 Old Ottoman carpets Large pattern Type IV Holbein Carpets See also note to the last paragraph Erdmann Kurt 1965 Der Orientalische Knupfteppich Oriental Carpets An Essay on their History tr C G Ellis New York 1960 3rd ed Tubingen Verlag Ernst Wasmuth p 26 King and Sylvester p 17 a b King and Sylvester p 67 Cambell p 189 Old Ottoman carpets Type II Holbein or Lotto Carpets King and Sylvester pp 16 67 70 Ionescu Stefano 2004 Transsylvanian Tale PDF HALI 137 53 Retrieved 22 June 2015 via www transsylvanian rug a b c d Yetkin Serare 1981 Historical Turkish Carpets 1st ed Istanbul Turkiye is Bankasi Cultural Publications pp 59 65 17th century Ghirlandaio carpet sold at Christie s 5 April 2011 Herrmann Eberhart 1988 Seltene Orientteppiche Rare Oriental Carpets Vol X 1st ed Munich Eberhart Herrmann p 39 ISBN 3 923349 60 2 Denny Walter B 2014 How to Read Islamic Carpets 1 ed New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art p 27 ISBN 978 1 58839 540 5 19th century Ghirlandaio carpet at the Met Museum of Art Retrieved 16 June 2015 Zipper Kurt Fritzsche Claudia 1995 Oriental Rugs Vol 4 Turkish 1st ed Woodbridge Suffolk UK Antique Collectors Club Ltd p 18 Herrmann Eberhart 1982 From Konya to Kokand Rare Oriental Carpets III Munich Eberhart Herrmann Bruggemann Werner Boehmer Harald 1982 Teppiche der Bauern und Nomaden in Anatolien 1st ed Munich Verlag Kunst und Antiquitaten pp 60 78 ISBN 3 921811 20 1 King and Sylvester 20 Bruggemann Werner 2007 Der Orientteppich The Oriental Carpet 1st ed Wiesbaden Germany Dr Ludwig Reichert Verlag pp 87 176 ISBN 978 3 89500 563 3 a b c Ydema 1991 p 9 Beattie May H 1972 The Thyssen Bornemisza Collection of Oriental Rugs 1st ed Castagnola The Thyssen Bornemisza Collection Ydema 1991 p 19 20 Ottoman Cairene carpet in the Met Museum of Art Retrieved 27 August 2015 Pinner R Franses M 1981 East Mediterranean carpets in the Victoria and Albert Museum Hali IV 1 39 40 Ydema 1991 p 21 25 The Sala delle Dame Hali 200 208 2019 Pinner Robert Franses Michael 1981 East mediterranean carpets in the Victoria amp Albert Museum Hali 4 1 40 Ydema 1991 p 43 Star Ushak Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 11 July 2015 Tapis Present de l orient a l occident 1st ed Paris L Institut du Monde Arabe 1989 p 4 ISBN 9782906062283 Medallion Ushak carpet at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 30 August 2015 Ydema 1991 p 39 45 King amp Sylvester 19 Examples in Polish collections led to their being miscalled Polish carpets in the 19th century a misnomer that has stuck representations of Polish silk rugs in paintings are rare report Dimand and Mailey 1973 p 59 Maurice Dimand and Jean Mailey Oriental Rugs in The Metropolitan Museum of Art p 60 fig 83 Dimand and Mailey 1973 p 67 illustrating floral Herat rugs in A Visit to the Nursery by Gabriel Metsu Metropolitan Museum of Art 17 190 20 p 67 fig 94 Portrait of Omer Talon by Philippe de Champaigne 1649 National Gallery of Art Washington p 70 fig 98 Woman with a Water Jug by Jan Vermeer Metropolitan Museum of Art 89 15 21 p 71 fig 101 Ydema 1991 p 48 51 Ionescu Stefano 2005 Antique Ottoman Rugs in Transylvania PDF 1st ed Rome Verduci Editore Retrieved 7 September 2015 Ydema 1991 p 51 In the collection of Harvard University Law School illustrated in Dimand and Mailey 1973 p 193 fig 178 King amp Sylvester pp 22 23 Pope John Paul II s coffin placed on a Bijar carpet during his funeral mass The Times 19 February 2011 Retrieved 7 July 2015 Gantzhorn Volkmar 1998 Orientalische Teppiche eine Darstellung der ikonographischen und ikonologischen Entwicklung von den Anfangen bis zum 18 Jahrhundert Oriental carpets Their iconographical and iconological development from the beginnings to the 18th century in German Cologne Taschen ISBN 3 8228 0397 9 a b Rupprich Hans ed 1956 A Durer Schriftlicher Nachlass Writings 3rd ed Berlin Deutscher Verein fur Kunstwissenschaft Erdmann Kurt 1962 Europa und der Orientteppich Europe and the Oriental Rug in German 1st ed Mainz Florian Kupferberg Verlag p 49 Raby Julian 1982 Venice Durer and the oriental mode 1 publ ed S l Islamic Art Publications ISBN 978 0856671623 Westermann Mariet 2007 A worldly art the Dutch Republic 1585 1718 2nd reprinted ed New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300107234 Bergstrom Ingvar 1983 Dutch still life painting in the seventeenth century Facsim ed New York Hacker art books ISBN 978 0878172795 Vasari Giorgio 2005 Jacks Philip Joshua ed The lives of the most excellent painters sculptors and architects Translated by du C de Vere Gaston Pbk ed New York Modern Library ISBN 978 0375760365 The Sultan Mehmet II Nationalgallery org uk Archived from the original on 2007 08 26 Retrieved 2013 09 17 Historic floors by Jane Fawcett p 156References editCampbell Gordon The Grove Encyclopedia of Decorative Arts Volume 1 Carpet S 2 History pp 187 193 Oxford University Press US 2006 ISBN 0 19 518948 5 ISBN 978 0 19 518948 3 Google books King Donald and Sylvester David eds The Eastern Carpet in the Western World From the 15th to the 17th century Arts Council of Great Britain London 1983 ISBN 0 7287 0362 9 Mack Rosamond E Bazaar to Piazza Islamic Trade and Italian Art 1300 1600 University of California Press 2001 ISBN 0 520 22131 1 Ydema Onno Carpets and their datings in Netherlandish Paintings 1540 1700 Antique Collectors Club Woodbridge ISBN 1 85149 151 1Further reading editBrancati Luca E Figurative Evidence for the Philadelphia Blue Ground SPH and an Art Historical Case Study Gaudenzio Ferrari and Sperindio Cagnoli Oriental Carpet and Textile Studies Vol V part 1 1999 23 29 Brancati Luca E The carpets of the Painters Exhibition catalogue Skira Milan 1999 Burke S Maureen Mary with Her Spools of Thread Domesticating the Sacred Interior in Tuscan Trecento Art in John Garton and Diane Wolfthal eds New Studies on Old Masters Essays in Renaissance Art in Honour of Colin Eisler Toronto Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies 2011 289 307 Mills John Carpets in Pictures The National Gallery London 1976 Revised and expanded edition published as Carpets in Paintings 1983 Mills John Early animal carpets in western paintings a review HALI The International Journal of Oriental Carpets and Textiles Vol 1 no 3 1978 234 43 Mills John Small pattern Holbein carpets in western paintings HALI Vol 1 no 4 1978 326 34 Three further examples HALI Vol 3 no 3 1981 217 Mills John Lotto carpets in western paintings HALI Vol 3 no 4 1981 278 89 Mills John East Mediterranean carpets in western paintings HALI Vol 4 no 1 1981 53 5 Mills John Near Eastern Carpets in Italian Paintings in Oriental Carpet and Textile Studies Vol II 1986 109 21 Mills John The Bellini Keyhole or Re entrant rugs HALI Issue 58 1991 86 103 127 8 Mills John The animal rugs revisited Oriental Carpet and Textile Studies Vol VI 2001 46 51 Rocella Valentina Large Pattern Holbein Carpets in Italian Paintings Oriental Carpet and Textile Studies Vol VI 2001 68 73 Spallanzani Marco Oriental Rugs in Renaissance Florence The Bruschettini Foundation for Islamic and Asian Art Genova 2007 Born Robert Dziewulski Michael Messling Guido eds 2015 The Sultan s world The Ottoman Orient in Renaissance art 1 ed Ostfildern Germany Hatje Cantz Verlag ISBN 9783775739665 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting The Carpet Index The Oriental Carpet in Early Renaissance Paintings Carpets in Western Europe During the Renaissance Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting amp oldid 1214441832 Memling carpets, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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