Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

To me, rugs are no longer to be looked down upon

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • To me, rugs are no longer to be looked down upon

    Christian Science Monitor
    May 14 2004

    To me, rugs are no longer to be looked down upon

    By Annette Amelia Oliveira

    Except for a cheap braided oval from a department store in the Bronx,
    my family had no rugs when I grew up. We kept to worn linoleum and
    scuffed hardwood floors. The wall-to-wall rugs in the homes of my
    more affluent friends seemed, to my mind, unsanitary. I was disgusted
    by the idea of spreading thick wool on the floor, tracking over it
    with shoes, and living with the dirt I was sure vacuums left behind.
    The only rug I would ever have, I thought, was one that you could
    take outside and beat.
    My view of rugs changed profoundly 20 years ago, however, when I
    married. My husband, Haig, is passionate about rugs. His father was
    Armenian, a culture that for eons esteemed carpets as a form of
    wealth. As a child, Haig spent hours at the home of his Armenian
    grandmother.

    There, in spaces where most people had one fine rug laid out, she
    piled several, one on top of the other.

    In our marriage, rugs are an arena where extravagance is permitted,
    where we loosen our well-guarded purse strings to allow ourselves a
    marvelous work of art. Haig revels in rug stores the way a dog,
    having been locked indoors for hours, revels when he's set free to
    leap in a sunny field.

    Our home is thick with rugs. A small Baluch brightens the living-room
    wall. A Tibetan rug mimics a striped tiger skin, edged with
    multicolored clouds. Small Chinese silk rugs soften the seats of
    chairs. A Kilim stripes colors across a hardwood floor. Mexican and
    Persian rugs cover the seats of our sofas. Haig, who is a therapist,
    even has a mouse pad replicating the rug that Sigmund Freud once
    spread out on his psychiatrist's couch.

    Our most magnificent piece is a large tribal rug that Haig hunted
    down in New York City years ago when we had gone to visit family. He
    found it in a dusty Middle Eastern rug warehouse, fell in love, and
    excitedly asked me to take a look.

    We're both practiced bargainers who know how to maintain a stone
    face. But when I saw the thing rolled out before me, I couldn't hold
    back a gasp of pleasure. We haggled the owner down. But we knew he'd
    gotten the better of the deal when, with a satisfied smile, he threw
    in delivery free of charge.

    The rug holds myriad fancies of color and pattern in deep blue, red
    madder, and ochre. It's a joy to explore, with unexpected butterflies
    and animals, not to mention a shape that looks like a Pac-Man from
    Mars.

    Ten years after we bought the rug, we went to an Armenian Rug Society
    exhibit and discovered that the rug had been made in Armenia.

    Every morning I like to do a series of morning exercises. These
    entail descending to, lying across, and rising from our favorite rug.
    I welcome this excuse to become more intimate with it.

    A carpet is the only art form I know that is made to be, not just
    gazed at, but trodden upon. Striking something with your feet usually
    abases it. These marvels of tradition and faith crafted for
    millenniums by the eye of the artist and the fingers of women and
    children are trampled like the dust of the earth.

    I think the opposite occurs, however. I think a carpet elevates the
    act of walking. Just as the apostles felt raised up when Jesus washed
    their feet, a rug asserts that even our worn soles deserve softness,
    color, history, and the fruits of the earth.
Working...
X