Advanced Search
Advanced Search

Carpets

Rugs were first collected at the MFA as examples of “fine ornament” intended to inspire and train American designers and manufacturers. Early donations from Denman Waldo Ross, a design professor at Harvard University, leaned heavily toward “classical” carpets from the courts of Safavid Iran and Mughal India, and joined an earlier acquisition of a 17th-century Mughal pictorial carpet, gifted by F. L. Ames in 1893. Subsequent collecting resulted in the addition of the Holbein Carpet, the Medallion Carpet, and the extraordinary 16th-century Safavid Hunting Carpet, a donation from collector John Goelet. The holdings were later enriched by gifts that reflected particularly New England tastes: Caucasian carpets and Turkmen, mainly Tekke, carpets. Largely ignored, however, were tribal carpets and flat weave (kilims). Later collecting efforts have sought to address these gaps; the Museum has recently acquired Persian (Luri) flatweave and Kazak carpets, as well as a 1960s Danish modern riyya rug and a 1980s carpet, designed by the Memphis Design Group, that extend the collection into the late 20th century.