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Early Turkoman Design Evolution
- By Allen, Jim
- Published 20 March 2008
- Carpets
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Allen, Jim
Jim Allen has collected Turkomen weavings since the late 1970's along with other types of ethnographic art. He has been a guest of the Turkmanbashii, the supreme ruler of Turkmenistan, where he delivered a paper to the "Symposium on Cultural Affairs Concerning Classical Culture" in Askhabad, Turkmenistan, in October of 2000. Jim Allen published interesting articles in Hali and Ghereh magazines, Oriental Rug Studies V, and lectured at the International and the National Conferences on Oriental Rugs. He once played varsity football on full scholarship at Jacksonville State University, 1969-70 and graduated with honors from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, 1973. Mr. Allen became a popular poet at ABC NOREO, off Remsen Street, in the East Village of New York City. Later, with the help of Nobiko Kajitani and Kurt Munkcasi, he submitted a Turkoman weaving sample that was confidently dated to the mid 17th century by AJT Jull, via Carbon 14 analysis, at Arizona State University. This marked the beginning of a new era in Turkoman studies. Subsequently several others (Heckshure, Hoffmeister, Rageth, Munkcasi etc.) tested and identified classical era Turkoman weavings. Mr. Jim Allen is presently semi-retired living in pleasant Chattanooga, Tennessee.
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The border to the left, slide #11, is from the purple group proto-Chodor main carpet, with velvet like wool and intense coloring, at the V&A museum in London. The other, slide #12, is from the large Bird asmalyk collected by Arthur D. Jenkins, presently situated at the DeYoung Museum in San Francisco.
I hypothesize that over the centuries the evolution of the bellowing elephant motif mirrored a maturing of the Turkmen's understanding of what mechanism elephant's used to produce their trumpeting sounds. It seems fairly obvious to me that the 14th century Turcoman designer/shaman/weaver felt that these trumpeting sounds were emitted generally from the front half of an elephant's body as reflected in border representation from the 14th century Turcoman rug discussed above. Later in time this stylistic idea evolved into an understanding that trumpeting elephant sounds actually emanated from an elephants head/throat area and not from its whole front end. Through the centuries this phono-pictographic design complex increasingly focused on the elephant's head with one trunk curled up and the other hanging straight down. Elephants curl their trunks when bellowing to keep the air expelled from their lungs going out through their throats and not out their trunks.

In conclusion the narrative quality of classical Turcoman weaving does seem greater than the narrative qualities of later Turcoman weavings. I have described how the red positive image of a gesticulating 13th century Turcoman shaman, wearing an animal tooth or tusk necklace, evolved into a set of four such shamen standing along the four prime meridians transecting the octagonal star centered iconogram of a long dead Turcoman people or tribe of the 14th century.
Turcoman designs evolved to suit the metaphorical needs of the Turcoman people during the classical period. I believe these needs were judged by Turcoman shamen and their Khans. During the 19th century the Turkmen were frequently under attack and were driven from the Akhal oasis in the 1830's. The Russians kept on attacking ultimately culminating in the Tekke's total defeat at the Merv Oasis in 1882. During the 19th century Turcoman weaving became much more of a commercial enterprise because of the Tekke's need to acquire capital to buy arms and materials. The commercialization of their weaving caused the slow loss of design integrity and meaningfulness throughout the 19th century. This was not a smooth decline and several periods of intense commercial weaving created a body of work punctuated throughout with rather cold flat two dimensional weavings mixed in with true dowry weavings of extraordinary quality and beauty.
My method of study has always been inductive so I am constantly looking for rugs that seem 'archetypal'. I have experienced or owned a fair number of such foundational archetypal weavings and these experiences have helped educate me. I feel that the Turcoman rug described above now housed in the Vakiflar Museum in Istanbul is such an archetypal rug and one that has been very much under appreciated.


