The Tribal Moroccan Handwove Rug
Posted by Nick Pole on 7th Sep 2016
Dominated by the stark slopes the Atlas Mountains, the northwest corner of north Africa, known as the Maghreb, is the home of the great Berber tribal nation. For thousands of years the Berbers have occupied this region, maintaining their cultural identity despite waves of invaders, including Romans, Arabs, and European colonial powers.
Originally nomads, some of the individual Berber tribes have in recent centuries adopted urbanized lifestyles, developing cities along the southern Mediterranean coast and along the fringe of the Sahara Desert. Others have retained their ancient nomadic traditions. Visitors to the modern nations of Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco can experience both ancient tradition and modern cultural choices blended together in cities such as Algiers, Marrakesh, Tangiers, and Benghazi.
One of the most distinctive of the nearly fifty individual Berber tribal
nations, the Beni Ourain are the makers of a unique style of handwoven carpet that is gaining increasing popularity among interior designers
and home décor aficionados. Dwellers for over a thousand years in the
middle Atlas region of eastern Morocco in the region called Jebel
Bouiblane, the Beni Ourain were not exposed to Arabian cultural
influences as were Berbers tribes farther to the north. For this reason
they have retained very ancient textile traditions, ones immediately
apparent in the carpets, rugs, and wall hangings that they create.
Beni Ourain carpets and rugs are handwoven on flat looms, using yarn
spun from the distinctive fleece of sheep native to the Atlas Mountains.
On a background of the natural whites and ivories of the wool is woven a
distinctive range of geometric patterns in contrasting black and deep
gray shades created using local natural dyes. Beni Ourain weavers do
not follow set patterns or graphed-out designs, but instead create their
works in a spontaneous and personal fashion, making each piece that
comes off their looms individual and unique.
The yarn used in the creation of Beni Ourain textiles is also
distinctive. Unlike the wool used in other Berber textile traditions,
Beni Ourain wool is shorn from living sheep, not cut from a butchered
animal. Once woven, the pile of the yarn is longer than that found in
other styles, and knotted to create a particularly dense fabric. These
qualities all contribute to the particular Beni Ourain style.
This dichromatic color scheme, unique fabric “hand,” and traditional
tribal patterns are identifying qualities of all textiles made by the
Beni Ourain. These features also make their woven products particularly
adaptable to modern interiors. Unlike the richly colored and
elaborately patterned textiles found in other Berber tribal traditions,
the Beni Ourain fabrics blend beautifully with all the elements of a
room’s design, making a quiet statement while drawing together otherwise
divergent aspects. Indeed, they fit into the most ultra-modern room
treatments, their stark but never strict geometric patterns
supporting any number of other styles within a room.