Artwork Page for Turkmen Bag Face

Details / Information for Turkmen Bag Face

Turkmen Bag Face

1800s
Measurements
Overall: 88.9 x 127 cm (35 x 50 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

The front of this bag, called a bag face, displays the distinctive hallmarks of the Saryk tribe. The main guls, or lobed motifs, are subdivided in quadrants and alternate with angular minor guls in staggered rows. It is the oldest known weaving of the Saryk tribe, with a soft red ground color and white cotton and magenta silk pile highlights. Essential storage containers, bags were suspended from wall trellises inside tents and transported by pack animals during seasonal migrations. Bags were woven in one piece with pile on the upper part for the front face and plain weave on the lower part for the back face, and then folded and sewn along both sides.
A horizontal wool and silk textile showcases a deep reddish-brown field. Twelve octagonal motifs are organized in a precise three-by-four grid, each containing intricate geometric patterns in cream, brown, and navy blue threads. Tiny diamond motifs pepper the spaces between them. While narrow borders frame the top and sides, a wider, dense decorative band spans the bottom edge, ending in a short fringe of cream-colored threads.

Turkmen Bag Face

1800s

Turkmenistan, Saryk tribe of the Turkmen people (1850-1899), 19th century

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