877/​137

A Tudoc “LOTTO” rug, most likely Brasov, Romania. Characteristic lacy arabesque design executed in yellow on a red ground with blue details, upper left corner with coat of arms(Doria family, Italy). The name, “Lotto carpet”, refers to the inclusion of carpets with this pattern in paintings by the 16th-century Venetian painter Lorenzo Lotto, although they appear in many earlier Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting. Reproduction of a 16th-17th century West Anatolian Ushak rug. First half 20th century. 252×143 cm.

Born in Transylvania, Theodor Tuduc (1888–1983) was a Romanian master weaver, rug restorer and famous rug forger. Much of his weaving was done in his workshop in Brasov between 1919 and 1945. He made high quality, exact reproductions(including Transylvanian, Lotto, Chintamani and Spanish armorial carpets) of Anatolian, Caucasian and Persian carpets from the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries and passed them off as authentic. His technical skills were so refined that many of his, now famous, Tuduc rugs fooled scholars as J.F. Ballard, M.S. Dimand, Kurt Erdmann, Joseph V. McMullan, Ulrich Schürmann and were acquired by prestigious museums such as the National Museum of Art, Bucharest; The Brukenthal Museum, Sibiu; The Art Museum, Brasov; The Museum for Islamic Art, Berlin; The Victoria and Albert Museum, London; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Textile Museum of Canada, Toronto; The Nickle Arts Museum of Calgary, and others still undiscovered.

Condition

Konditionsrapport ved forespørgsel. Kontakt: carpets@bruun-rasmussen.dk Condition report on request. Contact: carpets@bruun-rasmussen.dk

Auction

Carpets, varia, furniture, clocks, 28 February 2018

Category
Estimate

18,000 DKK

Sold

Price realised

16,000 DKK