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Go Back   Turkotek Discussion Forums > Rugs and Old Masters: An Essay Series > 2. Geometric Rugs in Early Renaissance Paintings

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Old December 10th, 2011, 03:10 PM   #1
Yohann Gissinger
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Default Curvilinear stem with leaves border

Hello to all,

To illustrate the Onno Ydema thesis (I haven't read it yet) in the sense of a western gothic border ornamentation style (fig 39, 40, 41)



There is an example of a spanish rug (still existing?) with a similar border:



and for the tile joke a typical gothic style pavement from the "biblioteca Antonio Devoto" in Spain:








Best regards,
Y

Last edited by Yohann Gissinger; December 11th, 2011 at 01:04 AM.
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Old December 12th, 2011, 04:51 PM   #2
Pierre Galafassi
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Hi Yohann,

The «chain-mail» motif, prominent in the field of this peculiar group of rugs, apparently existed in both European- (Roman & medieval) and Asian / Islamic- traditions.

The example below shows this motif in another Roman mosaic (villa La Olmeda, Pedrosa della Vega, Palencia.).
In its simplest form, as here, the «chain-mail» seems to have been rarely used as field motif in rugs though.


*
Another curiosity of this (carpet-like) Roman mosaic is the use of the swastika symbol, which one might think to be an essentially Indian- and, most generally, East-Asian religious symbol.
The swastika is also the unique motif in the strange rug of FIG 65 of main essay ( Osma Master 1450 ).



Surely one should not underestimate the old and continuous contacts between civilizations.

Best regards
Pierre
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