What Collectors Look for in a Rug?
Rug collectors are a breed apart. While they generally have a virtually
professional familiarity with rug types, designs, etc, and well-developed
critical judgment in evaluating the quality and origin of rugs, they are
motivated by a peculiar sensitivity to the personality of the weaver that
resides in all good antique rugs - what may be termed the life of the rug.
Collectors are deeply concerned with the cultural authenticity of rugs and
strive for pieces that they judge to posses such authenticity. Most
immediately this translates into searching out rugs that predate the process
of commercial expansion that took place in the later nineteenth century, a
process which collectors feel led to the production of rugs for western
markets, pieces that were therefore inherently less authentic than those
made for local consumption. Some collectors are sticklers for condition, but
since they are frequently seeking out older, more authentic pieces, many
collectors have learned to place less emphasis on condition if the piece has
outstanding artistic merit. Collectors also prize rugs that are unusual and
rare, for these too are deemed to reflect a greater cultural authenticity
rather than catering to the marketplace. Some collectors are focused,
concentrating on building a representative collection of a specific type or
rug. Others have more eclectic taste, focusing purely on quality or rarity.