Traditional Indian Dhurrie rugs had been overshadowed by luxuriant Mughal pile carpets for too long. In the twentieth century these antique flat-woven Indian rugs began to be recognized and lauded as a significant art form of the Indian subcontinent. Transcending social boundaries, the Dhurrie rugs were used by both commoner and royalty. As versatile and welcome in a dirt-floor hut as it is in the most palatial home. At its simplest, it was a multi-purpose textile used as a floor covering, or for bedding or packaging, while the most elaborate were woven with the finest fibers and enhanced by gold-wrapped thread and graced the palaces of royalty.
In Business Since: | 2018 |
Mon-Sat 9 a.m - 5 p.m
Cash, Personal Check, MasterCard
None | Request detailed photographs | Sold Rugs | Todd Alexander Romano | Nader Bolour | Borlou Rugs | The Contemporary Classics... | Stephen Bastone | Tehran Rugs | Mimosa Green | Paul Wiseman | Thomas Jayne | DD Allen | Next Rug | Antique Oriental Carpets | contemporary rugs | Sarouk Rugs | Moroccans | Recently Acquired Antique Rugs | Caucasian Rugs