The Japan Times - Ancient Iranian rug tradition gets makeover as sales sink

EUR -
AED 4.265502
AFN 73.747171
ALL 96.371133
AMD 438.170486
ANG 2.078414
AOA 1064.91232
ARS 1643.82104
AUD 1.65299
AWG 2.09034
AZN 1.97882
BAM 1.964631
BBD 2.339305
BDT 142.048475
BGN 1.913411
BHD 0.438168
BIF 3443.253831
BMD 1.1613
BND 1.488232
BOB 8.026041
BRL 6.08928
BSD 1.161521
BTN 106.680043
BWP 15.7621
BYN 3.417948
BYR 22761.475575
BZD 2.33599
CAD 1.576761
CDF 2580.9933
CHF 0.901848
CLF 0.026809
CLP 1058.583269
CNY 8.01007
CNH 8.019559
COP 4402.85906
CRC 554.551993
CUC 1.1613
CUP 30.774444
CVE 110.762374
CZK 24.377313
DJF 206.386653
DKK 7.469957
DOP 69.150518
DZD 152.546063
EGP 58.228272
ERN 17.419497
ETB 180.152066
FJD 2.567058
FKP 0.872031
GBP 0.866818
GEL 3.141362
GGP 0.872031
GHS 12.566999
GIP 0.872031
GMD 85.360005
GNF 10184.778225
GTQ 8.911053
GYD 242.990679
HKD 9.08404
HNL 30.742046
HRK 7.540092
HTG 152.374231
HUF 393.025697
IDR 19679.385974
ILS 3.592203
IMP 0.872031
INR 106.746385
IQD 1521.532386
IRR 1531838.600863
ISK 145.093242
JEP 0.872031
JMD 181.897588
JOD 0.823407
JPY 183.298441
KES 149.982312
KGS 101.556112
KHR 4660.566915
KMF 492.391511
KPW 1045.18056
KRW 1725.465057
KWD 0.35717
KYD 0.967905
KZT 573.856883
LAK 24871.685395
LBP 104010.354699
LKR 361.317593
LRD 211.962685
LSL 19.428125
LTL 3.429017
LVL 0.702459
LYD 7.401235
MAD 10.831987
MDL 20.087337
MGA 4836.719111
MKD 61.671897
MMK 2438.613332
MNT 4144.766805
MOP 9.354604
MRU 46.48293
MUR 55.049954
MVR 17.954134
MWK 2013.956889
MXN 20.667424
MYR 4.582534
MZN 74.219107
NAD 19.428041
NGN 1612.801951
NIO 42.742116
NOK 11.14256
NPR 170.67666
NZD 1.967689
OMR 0.446525
PAB 1.161516
PEN 4.000682
PGK 5.002485
PHP 68.793121
PKR 324.407392
PLN 4.270378
PYG 7599.156453
QAR 4.23562
RON 5.091607
RSD 117.367968
RUB 91.745472
RWF 1694.034061
SAR 4.358595
SBD 9.350391
SCR 15.735777
SDG 698.526083
SEK 10.661952
SGD 1.485076
SHP 0.871276
SLE 28.456103
SLL 24351.874861
SOS 662.546615
SRD 43.730489
STD 24036.560671
STN 24.60881
SVC 10.162679
SYP 128.696871
SZL 19.43192
THB 36.922409
TJS 11.167165
TMT 4.076162
TND 3.412423
TOP 2.796132
TRY 51.175815
TTD 7.869797
TWD 37.022938
TZS 2996.153806
UAH 50.753726
UGX 4286.265775
USD 1.1613
UYU 45.69539
UZS 14164.666906
VES 493.717314
VND 30472.506076
VUV 138.53872
WST 3.165997
XAF 658.864546
XAG 0.01379
XAU 0.000225
XCD 3.138471
XCG 2.0933
XDR 0.815694
XOF 658.915838
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.090294
ZAR 19.228419
ZMK 10453.09569
ZMW 22.456842
ZWL 373.938053
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    -0.6200

    90.21

    -0.69%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    26.06

    +0.31%

  • AZN

    -3.3000

    194.22

    -1.7%

  • BTI

    -0.7200

    57.87

    -1.24%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    17

    -1.47%

  • GSK

    -0.7600

    54.51

    -1.39%

  • NGG

    0.1200

    89.86

    +0.13%

  • VOD

    -0.1100

    14.51

    -0.76%

  • CMSC

    -0.1050

    23.185

    -0.45%

  • RELX

    0.5000

    35.68

    +1.4%

  • BCC

    -1.9600

    75.35

    -2.6%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.2

    -0.04%

  • JRI

    -0.2300

    12.57

    -1.83%

  • BP

    1.1400

    40.44

    +2.82%

Ancient Iranian rug tradition gets makeover as sales sink
Ancient Iranian rug tradition gets makeover as sales sink / Photo: - - AFP

Ancient Iranian rug tradition gets makeover as sales sink

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

Text size:

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 traditionally woven in the Islamic republic are known for dense, curving floral designs in rich colours.

Their beauty and quality have long been recognised 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 carpet exports. This fell to 7.9 percent by 2019 as exports from China and India rose, Karimi said.

- 'New generations' -

There was "an impact" from international sanctions that targeted Iran over its nuclear programme, human rights and other issues, but he said other factors are more 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 seven-year-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 Sunday: 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 colours 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 metres square (3.6 square yards) in size. It depicts global personalities including actor Charlie Chaplin, the physicist Albert Einstein and Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin.

- 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 metre 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 colours 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, 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 India, Pakistan, Turkey and China 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."

Y.Watanabe--JT