A Qashqai rug, southern Iran, late 19th century, 203 x 197 cm.…
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A Qashqai rug, southern Iran, late 19th century, 203 x 197 cm. The historically powerful confederacy of nomads known as the Qashqai have produced some of the most collectible weavings to come on the western market in the past fifty years. Based in Fars province in southern Iran, both the settled members of the tribe and their still-nomadic confederates market their weavings through the ancient city of Shiraz. Qashqai weavings such as this example reveal the tribe's Turkic origins through the repeating hooked medallions and very stylised tree motifs, woven in a colour palette of lively blues, madder red, ivory and pistachio green absorbed from local Iranian traditions.

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  • Ivory - Ivory is a hard white material that comes from the tusks of elephants, mammoth, walrus and boar, or from the teeth of hippopotamus and whales. The ivory from the African elephant is the most prized source of ivory. Although the mammoth is extinct, tusks are still being unearthed in Russia and offered for sale.

    Ivory has been used since the earliest times as a material for sculpture of small items, both in Europe and the east, principally China and Japan.

    In Asia ivory has been carved for netsuke, seals, okimono, card cases, fan supports, animals and other figures and even as carved tusks.

    In the last 200 years in Europe ivory has been used to carve figures, for elaborate tankards, snuff boxes, cane handles, embroidery and sewing accessories, in jewellery and as inlay on furniture. Its more practical uses include being used for billiard balls, buttons, and a veneers on the top of piano keys.

    The use and trade of elephant ivory have become controversial because they have contributed to Due to the decline in elephant populations because of the trade in ivory, the Asian elephant was placed on Appendix One of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), in 1975, and in January 1990, the African elephant was similarly listed. Under Appendix One, international trade in Asian or African elephant ivory between member countries is forbidden. Unlike trade in elephant tusks, trade in mammoth tusks is legal.

    Since the invention of plastics, there have been many attempts to create an artificial ivory

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