Price, Steve
Steve Price, collector of tribal arts and editor Turkotek; Tribal Art Forum; VCU's Department of
Physiology. In real life, Professor of Physiology at
Articles by this Author
The Authenticity of African Sculptures
- By Price, Steve
- Published 21 March 2008
- Primitive and Pre-Columbian Art
- Unrated
The cost of art objects in general and those of black art in
particular, has increased during the last thirty years at a dizzying
rate. Following the law of supply and demand, quality pieces have
reached prices today that were unimaginable only a few years ago. For
example, in 1966 at the Helena Rubinstein auction, for which I was
engaged as the expert, acquired a Fang head for $22,000. This had been
purchased for about $9,500 before the war by the Princess Gourielli.
Several weeks later, a Swiss collector offered me $35,000. Today
(1974) I have offers varying between $80,000 and $100,000 for it.
Daghestan's Kaitag Embroideries - and Henri Matisse?
- By Price, Steve
- Published 21 March 2008
- Textiles, Carpets and Tapestries
- Unrated
Kaitag is a small district in Daghestan's mountains. It consists
essentially of two villages, and probably never had a total population
much over 7,000 people. Spectacular silk embroideries were produced
there from at least the 17th century to the early 20th century.
Kaitag embroideries are done on a cotton ground, usually around 2' x 4', made of several pieces joined together before being embroidered with silk floss. The embroidery technique is relatively unusual, the floss being laid onto the surface of the ground cloth in parallel lines and then tacked down (couched). This results in nearly all the silk being on the same side of the textile, with very little of it visible on the back side. The style of drawing is also quite characteristic, tending to be highly irregular and fluid, rather than angular. The embroideries were apparently made for three broad classes of use, and reasonable guesses of which use a particular one had may be made from the designs on it.
Kaitag embroideries are done on a cotton ground, usually around 2' x 4', made of several pieces joined together before being embroidered with silk floss. The embroidery technique is relatively unusual, the floss being laid onto the surface of the ground cloth in parallel lines and then tacked down (couched). This results in nearly all the silk being on the same side of the textile, with very little of it visible on the back side. The style of drawing is also quite characteristic, tending to be highly irregular and fluid, rather than angular. The embroideries were apparently made for three broad classes of use, and reasonable guesses of which use a particular one had may be made from the designs on it.
Are Oriental Rugs Good Investments?
- By Price, Steve
- Published 20 March 2008
- Carpets
- Unrated
How many times have we heard that oriental rugs make great investments.
Do they? There are certainly many that have been. One that is fairly
well known is the Salor tent bag that went through the hands of a
couple of dealers before a third one recognized it for what it was,
bought it for less than $1,000, and made a killing on it. Another is
the Saryk torba that languished with a $300 price tag in a New Orleans
antique shop for many years, then found its way to Skinner's in Boston
a few years ago and sold for over $23,000 (this piece was included in
the ICOC "Atlantic Collections" catalog). Tales like these are enough
to give many a customer visions of a retirement nest egg with
aesthetics (do monthly statements from stock brokers and mutual funds
have that!). How realistic is the prospect that you can get finds like
those often enough to accumulate wealth by buying rugs? Not very much
better than hitting the lottery, maybe even worse.
What do you mean, "It's a prayer rug?"
- By Price, Steve
- Published 20 March 2008
- Carpets
- Unrated
What is a prayer rug, anyway? There's probably nobody reading this who doesn't think he knows
what a prayer rug is. More likely than not, every one of you is
correct. Sort of. Let me explain.
A Muslim must pray five times every day. He can do this at a mosque, but that isn't a requirement. However, he must face Mecca (not necessarily east, as is often supposed) while doing so, and must have a clean place (not defiled by having been walked on with shoes or dirty feet) on which to kneel in prayer. Thus, any clean surface that can be placed on the floor is a prayer rug. A newspaper or a towel can meet the definition, although using a pile rug or kilim is more common.
A Muslim must pray five times every day. He can do this at a mosque, but that isn't a requirement. However, he must face Mecca (not necessarily east, as is often supposed) while doing so, and must have a clean place (not defiled by having been walked on with shoes or dirty feet) on which to kneel in prayer. Thus, any clean surface that can be placed on the floor is a prayer rug. A newspaper or a towel can meet the definition, although using a pile rug or kilim is more common.
How do we distinguish natural from synthetic dyes?
- By Price, Steve
- Published 20 March 2008
- Carpets
- Unrated
One of the questions that seems to keep coming up is, "How can someone tell whether a rug's dyes are natural or synthetic?" We might first ask why it makes any difference. Although most rug collectors agree that natural dyes are more attractive than synthetics, knowing whether a particular color came from a plant extract or from an organic chemical laboratory shouldn't change the aesthetics one whit. The real reason for caring is, or ought to be, that old rugs are worth a lot more than new ones are (all other things being equal), and knowing whether the dyes are natural or synthetic helps us estimate a rug's age and market value.


