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Moroccan rugs generally have bright bands of color alternating with bands
exhibiting geometric and mound like forms. They are frequent in Moroccan rug
flat weaves and evoke desert scenes.Years ago women had more time to create colorful rugs and carpets, mixing
different plants from the Atlas Mountains to find a special color. They tried to
create a piece of art better than their neighbor. Rugs and carpets had many
functions within the family. The rugs were not only used as cover, but as an
element of prestige between the tribes, a means of communication to express
suffer and harshness of the countryside. While reading the carpets made
throughout Morocco, you can live the saga of the old generations, their life
style, values, and morals. The geometric forms, and the choice of color reflect
the mood of the woman-artist who put this combination together. These enigmatic,
geometric forms will be found in the old jewelries and old Kasbahs, which
remains the clues of unsolved civilization. Nowadays few families live on
carpets as before. The old quality of the rug does not exist anymore with some
exceptions to modernized styles with artificial raw materials. The producers
have to adapt the new features of the market apposed by an economy based on
tourism.
Moroccan carpets are somewhat unappreciated and perhaps misunderstood by many
rug collectors, due to any number of factors, such as the ubiquity of blatant
synthetic dyes, seeming rote and monotonous repetitive banded patterns, and
misinterpretation of a weave which may seem loose and shabby in comparison to
more traditional Middle Eastern work.
It does seem that a great percentage of Moroccan carpets are of the coarse weave
and lurid dye variety, a quality which could be ascribed to Morocco's close
proximity to the west, with its availability of inexpensive artificial dyes and
perhaps even more importantly its being a major tourist destination with a
virtual tidal wave of airport art quality weaving generated in pursuit of the
souvenir trade.
But there are interesting, strikingly beautiful, authentic, and valuable
weavings to be found among the everyday - and of course not everyday - yet just
as with their Middle Eastern counterparts, it is a familiarity with designs,
materials, techniques, and formats that allow one to distinguish the average
from interesting and exemplary.
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