The Hunt Rug - a Unique Example from the XVI Century in Western Persia
Programme: Mon - Fri 10 am - 1 pm / 2 pm - 4 pm
Tickets: Full 14 € | Reduced 7 €
Location: Museo Poldi Pezzoli
Adresse: Via Alessandro Manzoni 12
Flowered branches, ribbons of cloud, peonies and lotus flowers frame a virtual court of figures, delicately depicted, intent on hunting lions, gazelles, tiny foxes and wild donkeys. You’re not crazy about rugs? Think again. Because the rug in the collection of the Museo Poldi Pezzoli, one of the most extraordinary in the world, will surely surprise you. For starters, it is signed and dated, particularly rare for Persian rugs. It was woven between 1542 and 1543 and comes from Western Persia. Its large size and the hunting scenes with both real and imagined creatures, suggests a royal gathering, perhaps that of the Shah and the piece was held by Italian royalty from the XVI Century until 1927, when it became part of the collection of the Milanese museum after having belonged to the Medici and the Savoia families. Seven metres by three-and-a-half metres, with a symmetric and specular design with a medallion with sixteen lobes at its centre, a motif replicated in its corners, its red background is covered with a grid of branches with flowers surrounded by birds in flight, perhaps phoenixes - it is a dream rug with, at its ends, the medallion with a title block and a pendant reminiscent of the lamps of mosques. But what is most striking is the hunt itself, a magnetic triumph of foot soldiers and cavalry, the horses themselves portrayed in minute detail. The eye falls upon the figures, armed with bows and arrows and wearing colourful jackets, turbans and red plumes, their expressions full of emotion. Besides depicting the Shah’s favourite past-time, a perfect training routine for war, the hunt symbolised the struggle between good and evil, instinct and reason. Symbols of the holy and the royal, icons of power, such rugs were often diplomatic gifts. And such may have been the case with the The Hunt Rug.
Neshat creates highly lyrical narratives, as well as politically charged visions, that question issues of power, religion, race, and the relationships between past and present, East and West, individual and collective.
After the resounding success of the 2023 European tour which sold over 1.6 million tickets and earned widespread acclaim as one of the best shows of the band's career, Bruce Springsteen returns to Milan for two dates at San Siro.
Galtrucco, the Fabrics that enchanted the Women of the Twentieth Century
The exhibition aims to revive the years of activity of the historic Milanese fabric shop, through a narrative path that begins in the 1920s, followed by dark historical events such as the Second World War, but also by the economic recovery of the 1960s up to the beginning of the new millennium.
2025 marks the centenary of the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes in Paris, the event that marked the affirmation of the “1925 Style” or Art Deco. To celebrate the anniversary, the exhibition presents extraordinary examples of Italian and European decorative arts.