Tapis KIRMAN LAVER

Lot 103
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Estimation :
5000 - 7000 EUR
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Result : 6 240EUR
Tapis KIRMAN LAVER
Cotton warp and weft, wool pile, Southeast Persia, north of Kirman in the village of Raver, ca. 1880-1900 5,90 x 3,84 m (Worn and probably diminished) BIBLIOGRAPHY SABAHI, T - " Splendours of the Oriental Carpets " - Ed. Atlas, Paris- 1987- p. 165 to 169 The city of Kirman has an isolated position, which prevented it from playing an important role in the Sassanid period but spared it from being pillaged by the Mongols. Its name, given in 928, means "place of war". Carpet weaving was encouraged during the Sefavid period, but was interrupted at the fall of the dynasty. It did not resume until the 19th century, and the offices of European carpet traders gradually opened there. Around 1920, the city opened up to the American market. The wool of these carpets, which comes from neighbouring towns and sometimes from Khorassan, is soft and white and was hand-twisted until 1950. Kirman is also known for its great variety of shades with fifteen to thirty different tones. Kirman carpets are often decorated with intricate floral patterns. To the north of Kirman, in the village of Raver, were produced the most beautiful pieces of the region, which were then given the name of Laver or Lavar. This important carpet is decorated with a large pink central medallion, extended by two pendants on an almond green background decorated with polychrome stylised flowers and floral scrolls. The main ivory border with polychrome floral scrolls is framed by fourteen small counter-borders with garlands of flowers
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