Events

NERS now offers two main types of programs

Webinar Series

The webinar series continues, drawing speakers and attendees from all over the world. A typical webinar utilizes Zoom to present a renowned speaker addressing a particular topic, with many stellar weavings as illustrations.

The webinar series has already attracted a group of rug and textile luminaries as speakers, including Jim Burns (Caucasian and Kurdish rug collector and author), rug scholar Walter Denny, and many more.

Webinar from Brian Morehouse on Yastik designs, and their relationship to other rug and textile designs

In-Person Meetings

Those within or near the New England area can take advantage of NERS’ other main type of program — in-person events. Most are speaker presentations; other in-person events include a traditional annual picnic with show-and-tell, and museum and gallery visits to exhibitions of oriental rugs.

Among the speakers featured at past in-person events have been such internationally respected rug experts as noted author Jon Thompson of Cambridge, England, rug scholar Elena Tsareva, (former curator of the Russian Ethnographic Museum, St. Petersburg), Belkis Balpinar, (founding director of Istanbul’s Vakiflar Museum), Parviz Tanavoli, (Iranian tribal rug expert), noted German carpet collector Heinrich Kirchheim, Josephine Powell, (Istanbul-based doyenne of Anatolia’s ethnographic researchers), and HALI co-founder Robert Pinner.

Upcoming Events

Webinars

Ever-popular speaker Walter Denny joins NERS for his third webinar. Expanding on his provocative and engaging keynote address at the recent International Conference on Oriental Carpets, Walter will look at the future of carpet studies, noting that, unlike other areas of art history, our current knowledge of more recent carpets is primarily founded on, and continues to be furthered by, information from the marketplace.

Registration link:

https://tinyurl.com/WDfringe

In Anatolia, the 15th century was a turbulent era; after an invasion by Tamerlane’s forces, the Ottomans managed to regain and expand their power, conquering Constantinople and forcing resettlement of Anatolian Turkmen tribes. Deniz’s presentation examines so-called Varsak kilims from southwestern Turkey. He will maintain that these kilims can be associated with the late-15th century relocation of a group of Turkmen tribes.

Registration link:
https://tinyurl.com/DenizFringeplus

A finely woven rug held in the Konya Ethnographic Museum, dated to the 17th century, is actually a uniquely conceived Rum Seljuk-era prayer rug. Hewing closely to the generally accepted notion that epigraphy – the practice of adorning artifacts with text – is a foundation of Islamic art and culture; Hayes will show that the rug’s designer used pseudo-epigraphy to inscribe the divine name. This design evokes the mystical idea of a ‘concurrence of opposites’.

Registration link:
https://tinyurl.com/SeljukNERSfringefb

NERS joins the Textile Museum Associates of Southern California (TMA/SC) to co-sponsor.

Registration link:

https://tinyurl.com/TMANomadsofWestIranners

The Levant, the culturally diverse territory of the eastern Mediterranean, came under Ottoman rule from the 16th century through the end of World War I. A cluster of silk weaving centers emerged in the Ottoman period encompassing both cottage industries and established workshops. The talk will outline the geopolitical influences on this textile group and present a range of silk garments, accessories and textile panels from the Ottoman era Levant.

Registration: 

The Levant, the culturally diverse territory of the eastern Mediterranean, came under Ottoman rule from the 16th century through the end of World War I. A cluster of silk weaving centers emerged in the Ottoman period encompassing both cottage industries and established workshops. The talk will outline the geopolitical influences on this textile group and present a range of silk garments, accessories and textile panels from the Ottoman era Levant.

Registration link:

https://tinyurl.com/5n7azwhp

seminar-speech

In-Person Events

Bring your Persian pile weavings—whether they were
made in urban workshops, town or village homes, or
tribal tents—to this friendly show-and-tell meeting! After
food and refreshments (provided, as at the picnic, by NERS),
members of our Steering Committee will start things off
with a few representative rugs and trappings of their own.
Then we’ll turn to whatever you bring—big or small, antique
or more recent—about which we encourage your comments,
not just on where and when your examples were made, but
also about what attracted you to them.
To provide the right amount of food, we need your
response not later than October 5. RSVP—indicating your
name and the names of those coming with you (guests
welcome, and welcome to bring rugs!)—to Jim Sampson:
[email protected].

Event Archive

Previous Webinars

Silk and Wool: Crosscurrent Influences in Turkish Rugs and Textiles with longtime NERS member Gerard Paquin on March 18, 2023 at 1pm ET.

Part of the mystery and appeal of oriental carpets is their ability to borrow designs from a wide range of sources. This presentation will document the influence of Ottoman textile designs on Turkish rugs, and the impetus for those artistic borrowings. It will also examine the impact of rug design on textiles, and the use of both as architectonic elements, in tent as well as town.

Registration Link:

3/18/23 Paquin Registration Link

Hosted by NERS with our co-hosts GW University Textile Museum and Textile Museum Associates of Southern California: Gunnar Nilsson will explore Swedish textiles, starting with such better-known types as röllakan, embroideries, and Flemish weaves. Then he will introduce lesser-known types, which never come up in foreign auctions or major Swedish sales. Although such lesser-known textiles are mostly of middling or low quality, they include a few outstanding pieces that can easily compete with the best Flemish-weave and röllakan examples.

Registration Link:

2/11/23 Gunnar Nilsson Registration Link

A New Perspective on Anatolian Kilims, presented by Ali Riza Tuna and hosted by TMA SC on January 14, 2023 at 1pm ET with NERS as a co-sponsor.

Registration Link:

1/14/23 Ali Riza Tuna Registration Link

On December 10 at 12 noon ET, NERS will co-sponsor DeWitt Mallary, on The Intrigue of Baluch Rugs, hosted by The George Washington University Museum and The Textile Museum. The webinar is also co-sponsored by TMA/SC. 

DeWitt is a longtime NERS member who has collected, written, and lectured about Baluch rugs for 40 years. His presentation will share many of the finest examples of Baluch rugs and bags and will discuss what makes them outstanding.

Registration Link:

12/10/22 Mallary Registration Link

On October 8 at 1pm ET Professor Luca Emilio Brancati will speak to us from Italy, on Afghan War Rugs: 1979–2022. He will focus on the development of Afghan war rugs from the Russian era until the present—a development that the late George O’Bannon called “one of the most interesting phenomena in rugdom.” Dr. Brancati organized the first exhibition of Afghan war rugs and has the only known collection consisting exclusively of war rugs dating from the Russian period.

Registration Link:

10/08/22 Brancati Registration Link

Season three will open with Professor Walter Denny, who was our first webinar presenter in September 2020. Please join us on September 24, 2022 at 1pm ET for What the Hell is That? Encountering Unknown Carpets in Museum and Private Collections and the Marketplace. Walter will share some surprises and puzzles he has found while surveying carpet collections for over five decades.

Registration Link:

9/24/22 Denny Registration Link

Presenter: Michael Rothberg

Topic: Saddlebags from Persia and the Caucasus: An Examination of Selected Design Motifs.

Date: Saturday, April 9, 2022, 1 PM EDT

Abstract:

Collector and author Michael Rothberg will present “Saddlebags from Persia and the Caucasus: An Examination of Selected Design Motifs.” Focusing on aspects of design in nineteenth-century knotted-pile transport bags woven by tribal women, Michael will show examples—Shahsevan, Kurdish, Afshar, Khamseh Confederation, Qashqa’i, Luri, and Baluch—from his recent book, Nomadic Visions: Tribal Weavings from Persia and the Caucasus (published in 2021 by HALI and the Near Eastern Art Research Center), as well as bags from the Transcaucasus, Persian Azerbaijan, and Varamin.

Presenter:  Alan Rothblatt

Topic: Rare Turkmen Asmalyks

Date: Saturday, March 26, 2022, 1 PM EDT

Abstract:

Of all Turkmen weavings, asmalyks—trappings that adorn the flanks of the camel carrying the bride on her wedding day— have been the most captivating to collectors. This webinar, “Rare Turkmen Asmalyks,” will present a selection of the best asmalyks from the various Turkmen tribes and will provide insights into some of these highly desired items.

Presenter: Tom Hannaher

Topic: “Painting with Scissors: Mola Art of the Guna (Kuna) Indians of Panama and Colombia”

Date: Saturday, February 12, 2022, 1 PM EST 

Abstract:

In our first webinar of 2022, co-sponsored by the Textile Museum Associates of Southern California, Tom Hannaher will present “Painting With Scissors: Mola Art of the Kuna Indians.” Molas are panels used in blouses worn by women of the Kuna (Guna) culture of Panama and Colombia. Employing a combination of appliqué, reverse appliqué, and embroidery, Kuna women create dazzling imagery based on Kuna mythology, customs, and daily life. They also seek graphic inspiration from non-Kuna sources, ranging from political posters to cartoons to advertising campaigns. Tom’s presentation will focus on pre-1970 examples and will include a number of unpublished masterpieces, some from the early part of the twentieth century.

Presenter: Jim Burns

Topic: “Caucasian Rugs: Six Decades of Perspective on Design and Taste”

Date: Saturday, December 4, 2021 and December 11, 2021, 1 PM EST 

Abstract:

Jim Burns will discuss examples of weavings from the Caucasus from the 16th century to the 19th century.  His talk will cover the major weaving areas, including Armenian work during that time frame.  It will illustrate changes and modifications of rug designs over the centuries with examples from his own collection.

Presenter: Brian Morehouse

Topic: “Yastiks: A Comparative Study of the Designs of Published and Unpublished Examples”

Date: Sunday, November 7, 2021, 1 PM EST 

Abstract:

This presentation will cover a range of topics that were not in Brian Morehouse’s 1996 book, Yastiks: Cushion Covers and Storage Bags of Anatolia (Philadelphia 8th ICOC, Inc.) as well as presenting new examples that have appeared since the book’s publication 25 years ago. Brian will also bring into focus images with their early history that suggest that some yastik motifs and stylistic content may go back many centuries. Weavers of yastiks were great borrowers of designs from both rugs and velvets, and we shall follow the transfer of certain motifs and design constructs to features found on yastiks. Most importantly, this talk will explore the changing visual language over time within certain yastik groups.

Presenter: Michael Franses

Topic: “The Orient Stars Collection”

Date: Saturday, September 4, 2021, 11 AM EDT 

Abstract:

Join carpet scholar Michael Franses for a webinar focusing on ten carpets featured in his forthcoming book, Anatolian Tribal Rugs 1050–1750: The Orient Stars Collection. Produced by HALI, this lavish volume will include previously unpublished Turkish and Central Asian carpets acquired by Heinrich and Waltraut Kirchheim after 1993, and will reexamine many rugs initially published in the 1993 exhibition catalogue, Orient Stars: A Carpet Collection.

In collaboration with NERS, the Hajji Baba Club, and HALI, GW Museum and The Textile Museum are hosting this webinar as part of their Rug and Textile Appreciation Morning (RTAM) series. NERS member Julia Bailey will moderate questions following Michael’s talk.

Previous In-person meetings

Presenters: Jim Adelson and Yon Bard

Topic: Turkmen Secondary Guls

Date: Saturday, May 13, 3 p.m. Note that the May 13 date is correct, not May 21 as shown in some places in the March newsletter.

Location: Durant-Kenrick House, 286 Waverley Ave. Newton, MA

Abstract:

Longtime NERS members and veteran presenters Yon Bard and Jim Adelson will again team up, this time to examine  secondary guls in Turkmen pile weavings. Many Turkmen pile-rug formats—including main carpets, storage bags, and trappings—feature both primary and secondary guls. Much of the writing about Turkmen weaving has focused on primary guls, addressing their design history and speculating on their symbolic significance. Secondary guls have received far less attention, but a look at even a few examples suggests that they are more varied than primary guls, and that they allowed their weavers greater freedom of expression. All who attend this meeting—members and their guests—are eagerly encouraged to bring their own examples of Turkmen weavings with secondary guls.

Presenter: Jeff Spurr

Topic: Prayer Rug and Textile Show-and-Tell

Date: Sunday, April 16, 3 p.m.

Location: Durant-Kenrick House, 286 Waverley Ave. Newton, MA

Abstract:

The next in-person meeting of NERS will be a show-and-tell devoted to prayer rugs—those Islamic rugs and textiles that adopt a niche form associated with prayer, the mihrab on a mosque wall, and the idea of the promise of paradise. Member and frequent speaker Jeff Spurr will begin the session with a twenty-minute introduction to the topic, based on his past work. After Jeff’s introduction, the rest of the meeting will depend on attendee participation—so bring your prayer rugs and textiles!

Presenter: Raoul “Mike” Tschebull

Topic: “Sources and Evolution of Transcaucasian Village Rug Design and Color”

Date: Saturday, December 3, 3 p.m. [Moved from November 20.]

Location: Durant-Kenrick House, 286 Waverley Ave. Newton, MA

Abstract:

After 1802, when Russians initiated their takeover of the Transcaucasus, village-based commercial rug weaving began to develop. Designs came from everywhere; sophisticated dye use already had a long history in the area. This combination of fresh designs and expert dyeing yielded rugs that rivaled the beauty of those from any other region or culture. By the 1880s, production of these Transcaucasian rugs had boomed; by about 1920, under intense commercial pressure, it had almost completely crashed. Mike’s presentation will examine the sources and changes in design and color of Transcaucasian village-based commercial rugs over this short period—how these rugs went from world class to pedestrian.

Meeting attendees are invited to bring Transcaucasian rugs for a show-and-tell following Mike’s presentation.

Presenters: Gerard Paquin and Marilyn Denny

Topic: Tours of their collections

Date: Saturday, October 1, 2022

Locations: Hatfield, MA and Amherst, MA

 

As a special event, long-time collectors Gerard and Marilyn have generously agreed to show rugs and related textiles from their respective collections to NERS visitors. Due to space limitations, attendance is limited to two groups of twelve, each group visiting one venue in the morning and the other that afternoon. Reply before September 20 to Lloyd Kannenberg ([email protected]). Should more than 24 members respond, attendees will be selected in order of response (with others wait-listed). Lloyd will send registrants directions to each session, instructions about which session to attend first, and information about lunch between sessions.

Date: Sunday, August 14, Noon EDT 

Location : Gore Place, Waltham, MA

The annual NERS picnic will be held at Gore Place, the lovely grounds of the former governor’s mansion in Waltham, MA. We’ll again have a huge, enclosed tent with water and electricity, adjacent bathroom facilities, tables and chairs for all, and plenty of lawn space for mingling and spreading out rugs. Supply your own picnic lunch, and NERS will provide soft drinks, tea, and coffee.

Lunch will be preceded by the ever-popular moth mart; we invite all members (dealers or not) to bring things to sell, swap, or give away. Past offerings have included rugs, bags and trappings, kilims, and other textiles; books and periodicals; and even tribal jewelry and clothing.

Following lunch, there’s the last show-and-tell of the season. Bring one or two of your treasured items to share with fellow members—mystery textiles or rugs, exotic specimens you think we should know more about, or wonderful new acquisitions you want to show off. 

Presenter: Jeff Spurr

Topic:  “Off the Beaten Path: A Yen for the Obscure in Textiles, Basketry, and Beadwork”

Date: Sunday, May 1, 2022, 3 PM EDT 

Location : Durant-Kenrick House, Newton, MA

Abstract:

On Sunday, May 1, NERS member and frequent speaker Jeff Spurr’s “Off the Beaten Path: A Yen for the Obscure in Textiles, Basketry, and Beadwork” will mark our welcome return to in-person presentations. His talk, originally given to the Hajji Baba Club, New York, in 2013, addresses the whys, wherefores, and history of his collecting, with stories from “the field.” Photographs of the walls of his apartment reveal some of that collecting range and its changes through time, as well as the textiles, beadwork, and basketry representing the traditions that have primarily captured his attention. He could have selected other traditions but here will focus on some that have specially appealed to him—Kashmir shawls, Central Asian textiles, Kuba textiles, Pygmy barkcloths, Kirdi beadwork (from Cameroon), textiles of Sumatra, and textiles, beadwork, and basketry of Borneo.