Global Times - Weekend

Modernized geometry

▶ ▶ Ancient Iranian rug tradition gets makeover as sales sink

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Striking geometric shapes that recall 20th century abstract art are not what you would expect to see adorning a handmade Iranian rug.

But changing tastes and increased competitio­n from Asia have forced some in the trade to redesign and resize a tradition dating back more than 2,000 years.

“A revolution is underway,” said Ahad Azimzadeh, 65, who calls himself “the biggest exporter of Persian carpets in the world.”

Rugs and carpets traditiona­lly woven in the Islamic republic are known for dense, curving floral designs in rich colors.

Their beauty and quality have long been recognized worldwide, yet sales have collapsed over the past 30 years.

“In 1994 the value of Iranian carpets sold abroad reached $1.7 billion and represente­d 40 percent of our non-petroleum exports,” Ahmad Karimi, chief of the Handmade Carpet Manufactur­ers’ and Exporters’ Union, told AFP.

By 2019-20 that figure had shrunk to $70 million, he said.

By another measure, in 2000, Iran represente­d 32 percent of global handmade carpets and rugs exports, Karimi said.

‘New generation­s’

There was “an impact” from many issues to blame, “especially by the big diversity of carpets on the market and the change in the mentality and tastes of the new generation­s,” Karimi said.

Azimzadeh, the carpet exporter, said “the future is with modern handmade rugs.”

He spoke at last week’s handmade carpet exhibition in Tehran. The annual event, suspended for two years because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, features about 400 exhibitors from across Iran.

“The patterns of Iranian carpets are ancient but today there is a strong demand for contempora­ry styles.

They’re more suitable for a modern house,” said Azimzadeh, a big talker who started small, as a sevenyear-old weaver. By 14, he had graduated to the commercial side of the trade.

Among the new styles on display at the exhibition which ended last weekend: a rug featuring small squares of hypnotic diagonal blue and white lines.

Another depicts diamond and other geometric patterns in gold silk on a black background. One wool rug looks as if an ink roller has left splashes of gold on it.

“The colors are clear and

the sizes smaller,” which is what modern tastes demand, Azimzadeh said.

As an extreme but less typical example of this “revolution,” Azimzadeh stands in front of a woven rug three meters square (3.6 square yards) in size. It depicts global personalit­ies including actor Charlie Chaplin and the physicist Albert Einstein.

From art to doormat

The new style is also cheaper.

Some sell for $3,000 or $4,000, whereas Azimzadeh has a 2,000 square meter traditiona­l carpet from Tabriz priced at $120 million.

His inventory also holds a 170-year-old piece from Kashan available for about $160,000.

For now, modern designs are still a minority at his stand in the exhibition, but the traditiona­l stock will be

gradually withdrawn, he said.“Next year, 70 percent of the rugs on display will be modern,” Azimzadeh predicts.

Karimi, of the exporters’ union, regrets that Iranian carpets are nowadays seen as “a consumer good to put in front of the door, whereas in the past it was an investment.

“It’s lost its status as an object of art.”

Another trader, Abbas Arsin, was perhaps ahead of his time when he created what he calls the “transition­al carpet” 25 years ago.

He took traditiona­l patterns and made the bright colors fade by rubbing them and leaving them in the sun.

“My father and my older brother didn’t understand why I wore myself out making the old rugs fade,” said Arsin, aged 40, the third generation of his family in the business.

But when he exhibited his first works and customers came, his family encouraged him to “only do that,” he recalls with a smile.

Arsin said many neighborin­g countries overtook Iran in the global market because “we Iranians had fewer relations with the rest of the world. We didn’t see the changes that were happening.”

Even now, not everyone is convinced.

“A year ago we began to make carpets in modern designs but they represent only five percent of our production and I don’t think we will go beyond that,” said Mehdi Jamshidi, 42, director of sales for Iran Carpet company.

“Modern carpets will never replace the traditiona­l ones, which are deep-rooted in our culture and regions.”

Hamid Sayahfar, 54, a dealer who spends his time between Tehran and Toronto, said the new geometric styles might be suitable for an office, but not at home.

It’s just a fashion, he said, “and like every fashion it will disappear.”

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? An Iranian woman weaves a carpet.
Photo: VCG An Iranian woman weaves a carpet.
 ?? ?? A traditiona­l rug from Middle East
Photo: VCG
A traditiona­l rug from Middle East Photo: VCG

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