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Artist and photographer Rudi Molacek has assembled, with an
artist’s eye, an idiosyncratic collection of more than 300
Tibetan carpets, rugs, mats, seat-, bench- and saddle-covers.
Between the 15th and the 20th centuries they were woven for both
sacred and secular purposes by Tibetan nomads and villagers, and in
the shadow of monastic centres across the Tibetan Plateau. The
first volume presents Tibetan rugs intended for sitting, sleeping,
meditation and horse riding, as well as those made to furnish the
region’s prestigious temples and monasteries — an expression of
the relative wealth and status of their owners. The second volume
focuses on a group of so-called ‘Wangden’ rural rugs,
characterised by a unique weaving technique, some of which have
been the subject of an illuminating exercise in radiocarbon dating
to establish the antiquity of the tradition.
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