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Lot 1954

A VAX CARPET CLEANER AND A FURTHER ELECTROLUX VACUUM

Lot 495

A hand woven geometric carpet, in shades of blue and red with tassels, 92cm wide; another smaller hand woven runner, with geometric patterns, in shades of blue, red and green, 67cm wide; another, similar smaller, 80cm wide (3)

Lot 494

A Chinese woollen carpet, with central floral cartouche, the ground with scrolls on a pink ground, approx 9ft x 12ft

Lot 433

A carpet - in shades of pink, blue and yellow, geometric motifs, 200cm x 200cm

Lot 390

A Caucasian rug, the central panel set with three repeating medallions on a dark blue and brown ground with stylised flower head decoration, within a stepped brown, blue and cream stepped border, approx 109 cm x 191 cm, together with a further Caucasian carpet, the central panel set with two repeating medallions on a dark blue ground, within a stepped red, blue, green and cream geometric patterned border, approx 91 cm x 150 cm

Lot 401

A Ziegler design carpet, the central panel set with all-over scrolling foliate decoration on a red ground, within a stepped green, yellow and fawn foliate decorated border, approx 232 cm x 274 cm

Lot 402

A Persian carpet, the central panel set with floral decorated medallion on a mushroom, cream and pale pink ground, within a stepped mushroom, cream and pale pink floral decorated border, 434 cm x 313 cm CONDITION REPORTS It is highly likely that the carpet has had animals around it at some point. There are various stains on it through out, appears to have been cleaned at some point. There is a line of rough stitching in one area of carpet. General wear and tear conducive to age and use. See images for more details.

Lot 113

20TH CENTURY PATTERNED CARPET ON A CREAM GROUND

Lot 257

PAR OF RED GROUND PATTERNED CARPET RUNNERS AND ONE OTHER CARPET

Lot 1227

Five 19th century Scottish ceramic carpet bowls, three examples with floral detail, two with crosshatch style decoration, diameter 6cm (5).Additional InformationEach example with numerous chips and losses to the glaze, old repairs in parts.

Lot 823

A NAIN PART SILK CARPET, PERSIANThe indigo floral field with rows of large medallions; an ivory complimentary medallion border313cm x 208cmCondition Report: Very good condition 

Lot 824

A TABRIZ CARPET, PERSIANThe indigo field with rows of rosettes in green madder and beige and tulip flowers; a sage rosette and bracket border299cm x 198cmCondition Report: Very good condition 

Lot 827

A KERMAN CARPET, PERSIANThe indigo field with a bold ivory medallion, pink spandrels, all with floral sprays; a brown floral border375cm x 290cmCondition Report: Areas of wear and across the centre, there are some holes and some restoration. The ends and sides need attention. The carpet also needs careful professional cleaning. 

Lot 838

AN ESFAHAN CARPET, PERSIANThe dark indigo field with a madder and ivory medallion, madder spandrels; a madder palmette and floral vine border338cm x 220cm wide

Lot 2268

A Persian hand knotted wool Kashan carpet decorated with overall foliate motifs against a beige ground, 348 x 247cm.Additional InformationGeneral light age wear through use. Would benefit from a clean. Some minor wear at the edge.

Lot 535

Middle Eastern design red and blue ground carpet, the central panels with floral motifs, flanked by geometric designs. 280 x 158cm approx. (B.P. 21% + VAT)

Lot 536

Middle Eastern design salmon and brown ground carpet with central floral medallion flanked by stylised flower heads and similar decoration. 204 x 164cm approx. (B.P. 21% + VAT) Poor condition.

Lot 537

20th Century green and beige carpet of large proportions decorated with oriental style flowers and foliage. 320 x 357cm approx. (B.P. 21% + VAT)Generally poor condition, wear to corners and edges, one large and some smaller holes in pile. Grubby.Artificial, medium pile. Woven backing.

Lot 541

Distressed Middle Eastern design brown and orange ground geometric floral and foliate carpet. (B.P. 21% + VAT)

Lot 1658

Vax Rapid carpet washer. Not available for in-house P&P, contact Paul O'Hea at Mailboxes on 01925 659133Condition Report: All electrical items in this lot have been PAT tested for safety and have passed. This does not confirm that the item is in full working order.

Lot 10

Berthold Lubetkin and Margaret LubetkinUnique sofa, designed for the Penthouse flat, Highpoint Two, Highgate, London, 1936-1938Norwegian yew, sandblasted pine, Cowhide, leather, chromium-plated metal. 77 x 196 x 80 cmFootnotes:ProvenanceBerthold Lubetkin, Penthouse flat, Highpoint Two, Highgate, LondonThence by descentBonhams, London, New Bond Street, 'Important Design', 21 November 2018, lot 169Acquired from the above by the present ownerLiteratureLionel Brett, The Things We See Houses - No. 2, Houses, Middlesex, 1947, p. 49 for the armchairs and daybed'Tall Order', The Architects' Journal, June 1985, illustrated p. 55John Allan, Berthold Lubetkin: Architecture and the tradition of progress, London, 2016, illustrated pp. 303, 305, 307, 562The Victoria and Albert Museum, London, Collections, https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1458096/-armchair-berthold-lubetkin, (accessed September 2021) for the armchairHighpoint by Nick Wright'There are only four kinds of artistic activity: fine art, music, poetry and ornamental pastry cooking, of which architecture is a minor branch.' So began Berthold Lubetkin's speech to the Art Worker's Guild in 1932. Over a fifty-year career he baked many fine pastries.His origins are opaque. A passport showing his birthplace as Warsaw in 1903 was false. He was born in Georgia, a colonial outpost of Tsarist Russia, in 1901. During the Russian revolution he enrolled as a student at the Stroganov School of Applied Art. He studied carpet design in Berlin, architecture in Warsaw, concrete construction in Paris under August Perret, though achieved few if any formal qualifications. Nonetheless, he worked on the Soviet Pavilion in the Paris Exposition of 1925 and, in partnership, with Jean Ginsburg whose bona fide degree facilitated planning permission, had built an apartment block on Rue de Versailles by the age of 30.Arriving in Britain with two passports, no family or verifiable CV, he was free to become the architect of his own identity. His nationality was International, his faith communism, the denomination Modernism. The penguin pool he designed for Regent Park Zoo became instantly emblematic of the movement. More commissions came; suburban houses in Plumstead, a beach house in Aldwyck, a bungalow cut into the chalk hills of Whipsnade. Then, following the Tottenham factory designed for Gestetner Ltd, he designed Highpoint. 'Nothing,' he said, 'is too good for the ordinary person' and Highpoint is the physical embodiment of that ideal. New materials, concrete, glass, and steel were presumed impervious to the elements, the elemental design to fashion. Although undeniably 'an achievement of the first rank' to quote Le Corbusier, Highpoint now appears very much of its time. Rather than housing the workers of an office equipment manufacturer the apartments were sold to private individuals whilst the white-washed concrete appears an homage to white liner modernism, new in Britain but rehearsed the decade prior on the Mediterranean coast and already rust streaked.It is the adjacent Highpoint II which appears the more prescient, bridging as it does the stark modernity of its elder sibling on one side with Georgian Highgate on the other. Indeed, it's startling to realise that what one takes to be a low linear building shares a roofline with its high-rise neighbour and this dual aspect continues throughout. The choice of Staffordshire blue brick nods to the Victorian engineers such as Brunel whom Lubetkin admired. The glass bricks of the stair wells were contemporary. Then there are the caryatids. Classical figures cast at the British Museum support the modernist portico, these draped ladies passed water though pipes cast within but remain a source of debate. Are they 'pastry decoration'? Are they a recreation of the figures on a childhood home? Or are they the earliest post-modern joke, an acknowledgement that a function of architecture is to entertain? In 1951 Lubetkin wrote 'for too long modern architectural solutions were regarded in terms of abstract principles, with formal expression left to itself as a functional resultant. The principles of composition, the emotional impact of the visual, were brushed aside as irrelevant. Yet this is the very material with which the architect operates.' Alessandro Mendini said much the same fifty years after Highpoint's construction.Preeminent among the residents of Highpoint II was Lubetkin himself who had designed the penthouse for his family and the apartment displays the same meld of old and new. A vaulted ceiling recalls the breakfast room at John Soane's Pitzhanger, suspended from it was a mobile made and installed by Alexander Calder. Expansive glass affords views of London, in the free space below was a suite of furniture designed in the vernacular style of Lubetkin's native Georgia.John Allen writes of Lubetkin: 'No longer content merely to revere the grand tradition of architects who design their own furniture – Aalto, Le Corbusier, Mies, Rietveld – he now steps up to join it. The low chairs and sofa were unique pieces of soft sculpture made personally by Lubetkin and his wife Margaret from hand chosen lengths of Norwegian yew and cow hide from Argentina.' Such a quest seems indulgent but careful selection of the timber is necessary to the design. The rear posts all require the same curvature, even the knots are regularly spaced to create symmetrical aprons and, as with the building for which they were designed, the traditional and avant-guard coexist; fitted into the rustic frames are airfoil sections adjusted via engine-turned bosses.These pieces of furniture are of real architectural significance - evidenced by the Victoria and Albert Museum's acquisition of the third chair. They were designed by the architect responsible for much of Britain's post-war social housing and the Finsbury Health Centre, effectively the first hospital for the NHS. They drew on his early life in Georgia yet sit well in his home on top of Britain's preeminent modernist building. Indeed, so attached was Lubetkin to the furniture that on leaving Highpoint in 1955 the suite went with him. Images of the farm cottage to which he relocated show sofa and chair wedged beside the hearth. Then when he retired to a terraced Georgian house in Bristol the pieces again accompanied him. Throughout a transient life it was as though this suite represented home more than any building. Perhaps home had always been Georgia.Bonhams wishes to thank Nick Wright, co-author, Cut and Shut: The History of Creative Salvage, London, 2012.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: TPTP Lot will be moved to an offsite storage location (Cadogan Tate, Auction House Services, 241 Acton Lane, London NW10 7NP, UK) and will only be available for collection from this location at the date stated in the catalogue. Please note transfer and storage charges will apply to any lots not collected after 14 calendar days from the auction date.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 3060

Amazing Outdoors American heavy duty camp bed and bag, Large fishing rucksack model Cypry CQT, Hi-Gear Voyager 6 tent carpet with carrier. Not available for in-house P&P, contact Paul O'Hea at Mailboxes on 01925 659133

Lot 801

A TURKEY CARPET OF LARGE PROPORTIONS 420 x 420cm (wear, uneven fading, a large section cut out and stitched back in)

Lot 804

A NORTH PERSIAN CARPET with a brick red ground and a central floral medallion, 282cm x 195cm, fading throughout and wear concentrated at edges

Lot 210

An Art Deco carpet, English school, c.1930,Machine woven, with repeat geometric motifs in a green field, 274cm x 445cm Please refer to department for condition report

Lot 313

A Scandinavian flatweave mixed wool and jute carpet, Mid-20th Century, Woven with leaf motifs, 326cm x 231cmPlease refer to department for condition report

Lot 391

Nani Marquina & Elisa Padro?n, a large woollen carpet,c.2020, with manufacturer's label to reverse,With black and red horizontal and vertical stripes in a beige field,424cm x 390cmPlease refer to department for condition report

Lot 493

A machine made Kashan design carpet on red ground

Lot 105

A large Afghan design carpet, approximately 300 cm x 200 cm

Lot 421

A Kashgai carpet, South West Iran, 320 x 212 cm

Lot 396

A Shark vacuum together with a Bissel carpet cleaner and a trolley containing shaver and two books

Lot 595

A Tabriz carpet, Iranian Azerbaijan, 297cm by 196cm

Lot 104

A large Tabriz design carpet, approximately 387 cm x 300 cm

Lot 96

A bronzed composition ornament in the form of a kneeling boy holding a bucket, 11¾” high, signed & dated "V. Marston 93"; & a section of carpet edging.

Lot 289

A Kazak carpet, centred with three medallions to a red field, 275 x 175cmCondition report: Losses to tassels, overall good order.Handknotted.

Lot 279

A Kirman carpet, with central medallion to a red field, 377 x 244cmCondition report: Losses to tassels. General wear. In need of a clean.Worn and in need of a clean. Some wear and losses to edges. Please see additional images.

Lot 281

A wool and silk Tabriz carpet, with a central medallion to a red field, 303 x 202cmCondition report: Minor wear. Overall good order.Some marks to the reverse, overall good colours and condition. Please see additional images.

Lot 280

A Bokhara carpet, decorated with gul motifs to a red field, 304 x 202cmCondition report: Some losses to tassels. General wear.Even colour, some surface marks and wear. Please see additional images.

Lot 286

An Aubusson style needlepoint carpet, decorated with a central medallion enclosed by foliate motifs, 300 x 240cmCondition report: Overall good order, some wear and discolouration.  There are sections of staining. Please see additional images.

Lot 164

Of Royal Air Force Interest, Marshal of the R.A.F Lord Tedder signed card, dated 4.4.46, complete with accompanying letter of confirmation from his Personal Assistant on Air Ministry, King Charles Street heading paper - Tedder known for his bombing techniques that were later known as 'Tedder's Carpet', together with another letter signed Marshal of the R.A.F Portal of Hungerford, dated 25/6/46 (3)

Lot 295

NORTH WEST PERSIAN YAZB CARPET 400 X 286CM

Lot 174

CARPET MIRROR 60CMS X 40CMS

Lot 298

NORTH WEST PERSIAN TABRIZ CARPET 375CM X 290CM

Lot 921

An approx 10'3" x 8'1" floral patterned carpet

Lot 1190

A Bokhara burgundy carpet, 356 x 184cm

Lot 1149

A Turkish Kelim flatweave carpet, 300 x 190cm

Lot 1107

A Caucasian design carpet, 240 x 170cm

Lot 449

A black and gold carpet runner, approx. 370 x 77cm, nice condition with very little if any use evident

Lot 840

MID-20TH CENTURY RETRO FLORAL PATTERNED CARPET, 262CM WIDE

Lot 839

MID-20TH CENTURY RETRO FLORAL PATTERNED CARPET, 262CM WIDE

Lot 292

CONTEMPORARY SILK AND WOOL CARPET, 323cm X 350cm.

Lot 307

FINE KAZAK CARPET, 328cm x 194cm.

Lot 334

ZEIGLER CARPET, 305cm x 245cm.

Lot 331

FINE TEHRAN DESIGN SILK CARPET, 305cm x 245cm

Lot 321

CONTEMPORARY ART DECO DESIGN SILK CARPET, 300cm x 250cm

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