Carpet thumbnail 1
Carpet thumbnail 2
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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Medieval & Renaissance, Room 63, The Edwin and Susan Davies Gallery

Carpet

1500-1600 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Carpets with this distinctive yellow and red design are often called the Lotto carpets because the Italian artist Lorenzo Lotto [c.1480-1556] is said to have depicted several in his paintings.
There are two obvious features in this carpet: a large area of re-knotting in the centre and the fact that the upper border has been knotted in slightly different colours - the dark brown used in the other three borders is missing. This yellow and red design was popular for over a century. It was worked from drawings and so its proportions could be easily changed by selecting which part of the repeating design was to be woven. There is horizontal repair across most of the upper part of this carpet. If you look at the left hand end (just inside the red field) you will see that the lines of knots above and below the repair are not parallel. This part of the carpet was badly woven and a ridge would have formed when it was on the floor. Someone later cut the carpet and rejoined it to make it lie flat.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Hand knotted woollen pile, on woollen warp and weft; symmetrical knot; 80 knots per sq. in (640 per sq. dm)
Brief description
Middle East, Carpet. Carpet, wool knotted pile on wool foundation, "Lotto" design, possibly Ushak, Turkey, 1500-1600
Physical description
Carpet, Lotto design, hand knotted woollen pile on woollen warp and weft, Turkish, 16th/17th century
WARP: light brown wool; Z2S; 16 threads per inch (64 per dm)
WEFT: light red wool; Z-spun , unplied; 2 shoots after each row of knots; 10 knots per inch (40 per dm)
PILE: wool; 9 colours: red, light red, yellow, green, dark blue, blue, light blue, dark brown, white; symmetrical knot tied around two threads; 80 knots per inch (640 per sq. dm)
SIDE FINISH: one cord oversewn with red wool
END FINISH: Both incomplete. Lower: 3 cm plain weave with red weft followed by 4 cms plain weave with green weft and then by 1 cm plain weave with red weft in the middle of which is one pass of thick white weft which goes over 2 threads and under 2 threads. Upper: as lower but the outer band of plain weave with red weft is only 2 cms deep.
DESIGN: Field: red ground with a typical Lotto design with yellow arabesques and blue infillings frequently outlined with red.
Main border: blue ground with an angular red meander linking alternately inward- and outward-facing red/blue triangles. The diagonal bar of the meander is crossed by a pair of yellow flowers.
Inner border: light blue ground with a red and white dotted meander linking flowerheads and a pair of leaves.
Outer Border: red ground with a white meandering stem in the upper and lower borders; in the side borders the stems is not continuous.
Catalogue Date: 8.3.96
Dimensions
  • Height: 181.5cm
  • Width: 116.5cm
Measured for the Medieval and Renaissance Galleries
Gallery label
‘Lotto’ Carpet 16th or 17th century Carpets were a popular feature of interiors across Italy, particularly in Venice with its trade links with the Middle East. They were draped over furniture to conceal plain surfaces, and hung from balconies on special occasions, but only sometimes put on the floor. The distinctive design of this carpet is named after Lorenzo Lotto, who often included such carpets in his paintings. [62 words] Western Turkey, probably Ushak Wool; cut horizontally and rejoined at a later date V&A: T.348-1920(5 Oct 2006 - 7 Jan 2007)
Production
Western Turkey, probably Ushak. Purchased with 4 other pieces (T.349/352-1920) from Harold Wallis Esq., St. Albans, Godstone Road, Purley, from his father's estate. for £35/-/-.
1 rug, Asia Minor, arabesques in yellow on red ground.
Illustration and comment "Turkish Carpets in the V & A", by M. Franses & R. Pinner (intro by Donald King), analyses by S. Jarman. Hali 1984, Vol. 6, no.4, p. 354, 365, 367, 380, 381.

"A Turkish carpet known as a 'Lotto@ carpet, 16th century. The name 'Lotto', after the painter Lorenzo Lotto (c.1480-1556) who depicted some in his work, is used as a convenient label for carpets with this type of endless, angular arabesque pattern - most often yellow on red.

There is a seam in this carpet which runs almost across the entire width; it begins at the top, towards the left hand side. It suggests that the carpet did not lie flat when it was cut from the loom and that a narrow ridge was formed - uneven tension on the warp threads would have caused this. This ridge would have worn quickly into a long tear, which has subsequently been repaired."
Subject depicted
Summary
Carpets with this distinctive yellow and red design are often called the Lotto carpets because the Italian artist Lorenzo Lotto [c.1480-1556] is said to have depicted several in his paintings.
There are two obvious features in this carpet: a large area of re-knotting in the centre and the fact that the upper border has been knotted in slightly different colours - the dark brown used in the other three borders is missing. This yellow and red design was popular for over a century. It was worked from drawings and so its proportions could be easily changed by selecting which part of the repeating design was to be woven. There is horizontal repair across most of the upper part of this carpet. If you look at the left hand end (just inside the red field) you will see that the lines of knots above and below the repair are not parallel. This part of the carpet was badly woven and a ridge would have formed when it was on the floor. Someone later cut the carpet and rejoined it to make it lie flat.
Bibliographic reference
Ajmar-Wollheim, Marta and Flora Dennis, At Home in Renaissance Italy, London: V&A Publishing, 2006.
Collection
Accession number
T.348-1920

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Record createdSeptember 2, 2002
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