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1970's Turkish Kilim Rug with Minimalist Style
$8,400
£6,373.73
€7,287.79
CA$11,732.52
A$13,044.97
CHF 6,811.36
MX$158,789.03
NOK 86,910.02
SEK 81,430.54
DKK 54,390.09
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About the Item
52624 Vintage Turkish Kilim Rug, 10'10 x 13'10. A rare and refined artifact of artistic evolution, this vintage Turkish kilim rug stands at the crossroads of Modernism and Anatolian tradition—a collector’s dream steeped in conceptual depth and material grace. Handwoven in wool with deliberate restraint, it evokes the spirit of post-war avant-garde design, where form was liberated from ornament and the loom became a philosophical instrument. Each biomorphic shape appears to float—buoyant, poetic, unmoored—inviting the viewer into a meditative interplay of movement and stillness. As in the works of Le Corbusier, the use of abstraction here is not decorative but visionary, a coded language of balance, gesture, and symbolic refinement.
The soft, earthen ivory ground acts as both canvas and silence—its minimalism not absence, but reverence. Suspended upon this field are enigmatic forms outlined in crisp black, punctuated by rare bursts of lapis blue, vermilion red, and verdant green. These shapes defy rigid definition, instead gesturing toward the contours of nature: stones in drift, wind-bent leaves, shadowed pools of water. Their scattered rhythm evokes the cadence of poetry—the kind that belongs not to language but to landscape. In this way, the kilim offers more than pattern; it offers presence, inviting one into a slow, curated world.
Exclusivity is woven into every inch of this kilim’s understated brilliance. The rarity of such an eloquently executed design—one that so seamlessly marries Anatolian craftsmanship with biomorphic abstraction—places it in a league of its own. It is an heirloom of the future, a piece that whispers status without ostentation, designed for spaces that embrace not trends but legacies. Ideal for Organic Modern interiors, gallery-like spaces, or curated collector homes, its minimalist allure complements both vintage classics and architectural masterpieces.
The story this kilim tells is not only one of aesthetic innovation, but also of cultural integrity and sustainable artistry. It speaks to a lineage of weavers who translated modern ideals into timeless textiles, honoring the loom as both tool and medium. To own this piece is to participate in a legacy of thoughtful design and social good—supporting handcraft, preserving heritage, and elevating the everyday into the extraordinary.
Like a rare manuscript or a one-of-a-kind sculpture, this kilim is not simply owned—it is curated, revered, and passed on. A portal into the realm where Bauhaus clarity meets the mysticism of Anatolia, it stands as an emblem of refined taste and conscious luxury. Here is not just a rug, but an experience—singular, elevated, and wholly unforgettable.
Abrash.
Handwoven wool, cotton, and hemp.
Made in Turkey.
Measures: 10'10 x 13'10.
Pile Height: 0.13 of an inch.
Date: 1970's. Late 20th Century.
- Similar to:Le Corbusier (Artist)William Baziotes (Artist)
- Dimensions:Width: 130 in (330.2 cm)Length: 166 in (421.64 cm)
- Style:Aesthetic Movement (In the Style Of)
- Materials and Techniques:Wool,Hand-Woven
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:1970-1979
- Condition:Wear consistent with age and use. Abrash.
- Seller Location:Dallas, TX
- Reference Number:Seller: 52624 Vintage Turkish Kilim Rug, 10'10 x 13'101stDibs: LU942944115132
About the Seller
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Flat-weave rugs & carpets:
Knotted pile rugs are just one small part of a vast universe of textile techniques suitable for heavy use. If you can imagine it, some weaver has tried it out. Pieces can be roughly divided into those reversible from the start and those never, or at least not initially, reversible. Thus, kilims are considered reversible, while everything else is not.
Kilims are tapestry woven rugs with both sides the same, in either slit technique where colors change, or with various methods of avoiding slits. Slit tapestry weave goes back to ancient times and Coptic Egyptian weavers used it for ornaments on garments and larger wall hangings. Slits can be avoided by dovetailing of colors (warp sharing) or by interlocking the wefts. The Navajo weavers of the Southwest practice the first while the Fine shawl weavers of Kashmir and Kerman employed the second. Interlocking produces a one-faced fabric, with smooth and rough, ridged faces. The typical Turkish, Caucasian, or Persian rustic Kilim shows slits, but never long ones. Aubusson French carpets are also slit tapestries and the long color transitions are sewn up as part of the regular maintenance. Some kilims are very Fine. The best antique urban Sehna (Senna) kilims on wool, cotton or silk warps approximate the comparable rugs in refinement and are the most desirable of all Persian kilims. Although the various flatweave techniques are usually expressed in geometric, simple, often repeating, patterns, Sehna kilims demonstrate that even the most intricate designs can be effectively rendered in flat-stich. The term ‘Kilim’ has been extended to cover any pileless, weft-faced heavy textile. Thus, the sectioned and joined northeastern Persian horizontally striped wool rugs are called ‘kilims’. So are the plain-weave end finishes of pile rugs. All these are weft-faced, weft patterned flatweaves.
These sectioned pieces are woven not on a frame loom, but one steadied by the weaver at one end and with the warps fastened down at the other. Only relatively recent have these tribal pieces become available. They are used as floorcoverings, hangings, room dividers, furniture covers. They are mostly bitonal in shades of natural dark brown and beige. Some more recent pieces show weaver innovations with ikat and moire effects. Work proceeds quickly and a skilled weaver can complete a thirty foot strip in almost no time.
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There are other ways of pattern by weft. Often on smaller tribal pieces, the pattern weft(s) is (are) part of the weft structure, moving in an out, and holding the whole thing together. These wefts can be complementary or added (supplementary), continuous across the flatweave or cut off as they travel unneeded across the verso. Supplementary weft flatweaves are often very compact and substantial. The nomadic Turkmen and Balouch tribes employ both supplementary and complementary weft techniques on their pieces. Supplementary wefts are often raised on the recto (front) while complementary wefts are flat to the surface. Tribal Kurds employ this extra-wefting technique. The Balouch of Pakistan use complementary wefts almost exclusively on their small woven paraphernalia like salt bags.
Flatweave techniques may be combined on a single piece. Afshar rugs employ plain-weave end strips, preceded by Soumak bands, with pile sections between. The large Bakhtiari saddlebags feature Soumak work, pile “islands” an areas of plain-weave. Qashqai rugs and kilims frequently displays checkerboard end strips in continuous, complementary wefting.
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