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Title :
Introduction
My object in publishing this newsletter
is to propagate the concept of the Oriental Rug as a work of art.This has
been neglected by the so-called scholars in favor of technical, art-historical
and ethnological emphasis. This is my only motivation. I am just a collector
and NOT in the rug business!
Having reached the ripe age of 88
years and having assembled these delightful artifacts for 50 of these,
it may be assumed that I have garnered some knowledge in the process. However,
the more I learn, the more I know how little I know! It is hoped that other
collectors will learn from me and that I will learn from them.
Since my acquaintance with the computer
is very recent and since my technical aptitudes are minute, I have had
great difficulty with the necessary expertise. Now, I know what a woman
suffers when she gives birth!
When I started, there were very
few available books on the subject. My bible became Charles W. Jacobsens's
book. Almost all others were devoted to classical carpets and were a rehash
of the bombastic orations of Von Bode, Sarre, Trenkwald, etc.
From the very beginning, as a perennial
rebel, I preferred the weavings of nomads and peasants to the Persian workshop
carpets which had come to be accepted as the stereotype of the Oriental
rug. The stark designs, the vivid colors and the very weaving defects stamped
these with a humanity which the factory products never achieved! It seemed
to me that the best of these rural creations reached heights of artistic
expression that our modern artists are unable to scale. Just remember Andy
Warhol's "Tomato Can"!! I considered these textiles as far more than utilitarian
objects for, in such wonderful expressions of folk art are distilled ageless
traditions, fears and attitudes, in fact, the very soul of a culture and
life-style rapidly becoming extinct!
In relatively recent times, there
has been an avalanche of books on nomad and peasant rugs. Probably this
is because of the growing interest in these artifacts and the astronomical
rate of increase in their monetary value. Most of these concentrate on
other aspects. The writer regards these weavings as works of art and makes
their aesthetic appreciation and appraisal his first and foremost concern!
He has very little interest in knot-counting, determining the piles of
wrap, weft and pile and even less for ethnological studies of rug-producing
tribes or the history of the development of carpet designs. He leaves these
activities to others who find such pursuits scholarly and profitable!
Nevertheless, I intend to present
information and ideas NOT usually covered in the present literature. This
is the enlightenment that I needed those many years ago when my collecting
career began.
Since the only collectors I have
known were male, I will refer to all persons, not specifically named, using
the masculine pronoun. I fully realize that this may offend Women's Lib.
and, if so, allow me to tender my most abject apologies! On the other hand,
it is my considered opinion that there exists a multitude of vestibule
collectors for which my experience, garnered over more years than I care
to remember, may provide invaluable. I don't care if it raises a storm
of protest and that I will be called the "Lincoln Steffins" of the rug
world!
In conclusion, this publication's
worth or lack of same, I leave to the judgments of my readers!!!
Sam
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