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My favorite picture of George from Charlie's
Archive. Many people saw George in many different ways but
here behind Charlie Ellis is the way I picture him in my mind.
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I knew vaguely who George
O'Bannon was long before I collected carpets. I knew his wife Helen
first. I was introduced to her by the late George Bloom. Helen was a
Democrat and she got Blooms seat on the Pennsylvania PUC in a
Government shake-up. She was someone to watch in those days because
there was talk that the Dems would run her for Governor. All I knew was
that they were a respectable family, the husband George was in Business
and they had four sons. Helen never got her shot at Governor she died
young of breast cancer.
When I got to know George I realized he was more
than just the respectable father of four. He in his way was every bit
the equal of his dynamic wife. George and I were not friends. I liked
him and admired him but he was always too reserved for me to presume
that we were friends.
George was the protege of the late Don Wilbur.
O'Bannon and Wilber first teamed up at American Friends of the Middle
East. Later George went to Afghanistan as Deputy director of the Peace
Corps in Afghanistan.
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George and Helen with their sons Patrick, Colin, and Sean and Casey. George W.
O'Bannon
George's strengths and to some
extent his weakness were focus and specialization. Those things that
George focused on he mastered. It seemed when he set out to study an
area he did his homework. His bibliography as an outgrowth of that he
wanted to focus on the available information so he made a comprehensive
list.
In 1973 George opened a carpet store in Pittsburgh
and later moved to Philadelphia. In 1987 O'Bannon Ron O'Callaghan and
Don
Wilbur launched a color magazine version of Oriental Rug
Review. After Helen's death George sold his business and retired from
ORR and moved to Tucson Arizona. George spent his time writing,
traveling and enjoying life. He passed away after an illness October 2,
2000.
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- Was one of the most important rug scholars, O'Bannon
had a major influence on the state of rug scholarship in his day.
O'Bannon was a Peace Corp official in Afghanistan and learned about
rugs there. He later began writing books and articles as well as
becoming a rug dealer first in Pittsburgh and then in Philadelphia.
O'Bannon was editor of Oriental Rug Review. George retired to Arizona
where he passed away after an illness (non-Hodgkin's lymphoma) October
2, 2000
- Cornell class of 1961, majored in Government.
- 1964 American friends of the Middle east (where I
believe he first got to know and work with Don Wilbur.).
- 1966 - 1968 Assistant Director of the Peace Corps in
Afghanistan. Walter Blass was Director of the Peace Corps in
Afghanistan in that same time period.
- A friend of George's recalled that George's rug store
was burglarized and while George was attending to the damage and having
plywood placed over the broken window Helen passed away.
- George had a long friendship with number of Oriental
Rug Experts including Charlie Ellis,
Dick Wright, Ray Rosenberg, Ron
O'Callaghan, Don
Wilbur, Beth Mendenhall, and others.
- George was certainly not all sweetness and light and
could be acerbic at times however he was also blamed for many things
that he never did. There was a parody of a team of rug scholars that
caused a huge fuss that George was blamed for that he did not write. He
was also accused of being Dr. Cabistan. The primary author of the Dr.
Cabistan column is one of the World's beloved rug experts who is never
suspected and certainly not George.
- I remember a number of years ago John Howe wanted to
build a Turkmen loom. I was just back from seeing George in Tucson and
I had meet a young man whose father owned a large number of looms first
in Afghanistan and then later in Turkestan. The young fellow was a
student at the University of Arizona and I suggested that John contact
him through George. The father of the fellow was a friend of George's
and interestingly enough also a good friend of one of the Turkotek
group from Chicago. I remember the kindness George showed in helping
out John. That was the sort of fellow he was, kind and generous to a
fault.
- For years rumors circulated about George having
worked for the CIA. At dinner once I asked George if he had. He was
quite adamant that he had never worked for them and that his time in
Afghanistan was solely on behalf of the Peace Corp. I think it
important to note that both the CIA and the Peace Corp made very clear
lines of division to protect our Peace Corp workers in dangerous
situations around the world. So even though one ex-CIA lawyer formerly
of Virginia claims otherwise I am content to conclude he was not CIA
and probably not even a covert contractor.
- Ellis
and O'Bannon
- The Joseph V.
McMullan Award
- George
O'Bannon
- George
O'Bannon
- O'Bannon,
George W. Oriental Rugs.
- O'Bannon,
George W. The Turkoman Carpet
- O'Bannon, G. W. "The Saltiq Ersari Carpet"
Afghanistan Journal, Jg.4 H. 3, 1977: pg. 111 - 121.
- O'Bannon, G. W. From Desert and Oasis; Arts of the
People of Central Asia. 1998.
- O'Bannon, G. W. Oriental Rugs. A Bibliography. 1994.
- O'Bannon, G. Woven Treasure. 1986.
- O'Bannon, G. W. & Garr, R. Tribal Treasures.
Carpets and Jewelry From Central Asia. 1994.
- O'Bannon, G., Wood, W. A., Irons, W. &
Mushak, P. Vanishing Jewels: Central Asian Tribal Traditions. 1990.
- AORTA Conference
- "Uzbek, Arab, and Kyrgyz" Denver: ACOR4 Focus
Session, 1998.
- O'Bannon, George W. Kazakh and Uzbek Rugs from
Afghanistan. Pittsburgh: 1979.
- O'Bannon, George: Tulu: Traditional 20th Century
Pelt-Like Rugs from Central Anatolia. Philadelphia: 1987.
- O'Bannon, George. Baluch Rugs from Afghanistan, I.
Taimani Rugs, Hali, vol. 4, no. 4, pp. 352-356. 1982
- Baluch Rugs from Afghanistan, 2. Aksi Rugs, Hali,
vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 127-130. 1982
- The Nomenclature of Baluch Rugs, Oriental Rug Review,
vol. 3, no. 5, August, pp. 6-7. 1983
- Mushwani Baluch, Hali, vol 7, # 1, issue no. 25,
January. 1985
- Yacub
Khani and Dokhtar-I-Ghazi Baluch Rugs, Oriental Rug Review,
vol. 9, no. 2, December/January, pp. 16-20. 1989
- THE
SARYQ MAIN CARPET
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O'Bannon, G. W. From Desert and Oasis; Arts of
the People of Central Asia. 1998.



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Another solid performance from one of the
great rug authors. George does a good job but what makes this book
special is the accessibility of the goods. What I mean is the rugs are
the types of rugs that people with homes and families are collecting.
As such it will help most collectors understand what is in the market
and in their collections.
From the Publisher:
This catalogue documents the Georgia Museum of Art's landmark
exhibition of over 100 artifacts from the urban and rural peoples of
Central Asia. The major ethnic groups represented include Uzbeks,
Turkmens, Kyrgyz, Kazakhs, and Arabs from the recently independent
countries of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkeminstan, Kyrgyzstan, and
Tajikistan, as well as from Iran and Afghanistan. This publication
features a comprehensive essay and technical analyses by
internationally recognized textile scholar George O'Bannon.
Exhibition Dates: February 14-April 26, 1998
Essay by: George O'Bannon
114 p.; Illustrated (includes 32 color plates); Essays: 9; Published:
1998; $30.00
ISBN 0-915977-34-6
Georgia
Museum of Art | Publications
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Moshkova, V.G. edited by George W. O'Bannon.
Carpets of the People of Central Asia. Tucson 1996




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Moshkova is controversial but this work is
pivotal; in understanding Turkmen Rugs and Turkmen Rug scholarship. |
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O'Bannon, George W. Kazakh and
Uzbek Rugs from Afghanistan. Pittsburgh: 1979.
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A wonderful and very inexpensive introductory
general rug book. Buy a copy. Autographed by the author at his home in
Tucson fall of 1997. |
O'Bannon, G. W. Oriental Rugs. A Bibliography. 1994.




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One of the great reference sources on rug
literature. |




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Good rugs, Good books. O'Bannon does a superb job
of cataloguing the 1998 Aorta show. |
O'Bannon, G.W. & Garr, R. Tribal Treasures.
Carpets and Jewelry From Central Asia. 1994.



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I like this book. O'Bannon gives an interesting
and fun look at Afghan Turkoman carpets. There is something special
about this book that is hard to describe but it is my favorite by
O'Bannon. Autographed by the author at his home in Tucson fall of 1997.
There was one printing but the book was released first with one cover
and then the last 5000 were released with a less expensive cover.
George tells me that mine was in the first group. |
O'Bannon, George: Tulu: Traditional 20th Century
Pelt-Like Rugs from Central Anatolia. Philadelphia: 1987.
O'Bannon, G. Woven Treasure. 1986.
| GEORGE W. O'BANNON (1936-2000)
Oriental rug scholar, George W. O'Bannon, passed
away in Tucson, Arizona on 2 October, aged 64 years. The cause was
lymphoma. O'Bannon's writings on the carpets, textiles, costumes and
people of Central Asia inspired a generation of enthusiasts.
After serving in the navy in the 1950s, he studied
Political Science at Cornell University and earned a Master's degree in
Middle Eastern Studies at Stanford. While studying in California he met
his wife-to-be, Helen Bohen. Soon after their marriage in 1962, the
couple moved to Washington DC, where George worked for the Department
of Agriculture and the American Friends of the Middle East. Three years
later, he was appointed Assistant Director of the Peace Corps in
Afghanistan, where he began his lifelong study of carpets and Central
Asian culture. "Carpets seemed like the only things that had any value
in Afghanistan," he often remarked.
He returned to the US in 1968, and after a stint
at the University of Pittsburgh, opened O'Bannon Oriental Carpets. It
was around the same time, in 1975, that he published his first book,
The Turkoman Carpet. In the early 1980s, O'Bannon sold his Pittsburgh
business and moved to Philadelphia, opening a gallery there
specializing in textiles and Central Asian art.
After his wife's death in 1988, he closed the
gallery and concentrated on his career as a writer, curator and speaker
on oriental rugs. From 1987 to 1991, he served as Editor of the
Oriental Rug Review, the only American magazine reporting exclusively
on the rug and textile market. He retired to Tucson in 1993.
O'Bannon is survived by his four sons and three
daughters-in-law, two grandchildren and his longtime companion, Arlene
Cooper.
Written by Colin A. O'Bannon
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| It saddens all of us to tell you that one of the
great oriental rug specialists has gone to Heaven. We shall
remember his friendship, passion for life and many accomplishments.
George W. O’Bannon, oriental
rug scholar whose writings on the textiles, costumes and people of
Central Asia inspired a generation of enthusiasts of tribal arts, died
in Tucson, Arizona on October 2, 2000. He was 64.
The cause was lymphoma.
George’s first love, developed while still a
youngster growing up in Artesia, New Mexico, was gardening and
horticulture. He frequently credited his early interest in
plants and taxonomy for his ability to see connections in the myriad
combinations of patterns and designs in oriental carpets, particularly
those of the nomadic tribes of Central Asia. Until the time
of his death, George remained an avid gardener.
After serving in the navy in the 1950s, George
studied Political Science at Cornell and earned a master’s degree in
Middle Eastern Studies at Stanford. While studying in
California. He met his wife, Helen Bohen, a graduate student
in economics. Shortly after their marriage in 1962, the
couple relocated to Washington, D.C., where George worked for the
Department of Agriculture and the American Friends of the Middle
East. In 1965, he was appointed Assistant Director of the
Peace Corps in Afghanistan where he began his lifelong study of carpets
and Central Asian culture. “Carpets seemed like the only
things that had any value in Afghanistan,” he said on several
occasions. In time, though, George developed an appreciation
for all aspects of the culture of the region that he came to love and
write about so passionately.
In 1968, George and Helen returned to the United
States where George took a position with the department of foreign
studies at the University of Pittsburgh. In 1971, George
organized an exchange program between Pitt and the University of Kabul,
Afghanistan with funding from the Fulbright Foundation. He
remained Director of the program until 1975 when he went into business
for himself. That year, he opened O’Bannon Oriental Carpets
in Pittsburgh, at about the same time, he published his first book, The
Turkoman Carpet, a seminal work in its field.
In 1979, the O’Bannon family moved to Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania when Helen, despite being a Democrat, was named
Secretary of Welfare for the state under Governor Thornburgh.
In those years, George commuted frequently to Pittsburgh to run his
business while continuing his studies and scholarship in tribal
arts. In 1983, after Helen was named Senior Vice President at
the University of Pennsylvania, the family again relocated to
Philadelphia. Shortly after moving to Philadelphia, George
sold his business in Pittsburgh and opened a gallery in Philadelphia
specializing in textiles and Central Asian art.
After his wife’s death of cancer in 1988, George
closed the gallery and concentrated on his career as writer, guest
curator and speaker on oriental rugs. From 1987 to 1991, he
served as the Editor of the Oriental Rug Review, the only American
magazine reporting exclusively on rug and textile art.
In 1993, George O’Bannon retired to Tucson where
he wrote and spoke extensively on textiles and returned to his hobby of
gardening. In Arizona, his love for the flora and fauna of
the Sonoran Desert was rekindled. During his years in Tucson,
he argued for the preservation of wildflowers and clashed with those
who, he thought, wished to sanitize the desert. He also led
frequent study trips to Central Asia and the Far East. Trips
to India, Indonesia, Turkey Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan occupied much
of his time. George also shared his love for textiles with
southwesterners: in 1998 he served as curator for “Tribal and Village
Rugs from Arizona Collections,” a part of the “Tucson Collects” series
of exhibitions at the Tucson Museum of Art.
In 1996 George realized a long held dream by
co-editing the first English translation of Carpets
of the People of Central Asia, by famed Russian ethnographer of the
1920s, Valentina Moshkova. In 1998, he organized
the award-winning exhibition, “From Desert to Oasis: Arts of the People
in Central Asia,” at the Georgia Museum of Art in Athens,
Georgia. At the time of his death, George had recently
finished editing two works on the carpets of Kyrgyzstan.
In addition to his numerous written and edited
volumes, George was co-founder of the Pittsburgh Rug Society and the
Arizona Oriental Rug and Textile Association. For his
scholarship and stewardship in Islamic textiles, George was the 1993
recipient of the Joseph V. McMullen
award given by the Near
Eastern Art Research Center. He leaves a legacy as
a brilliant and talented man, whose many accomplishments include
horticulture, photography, dancing and cooking. His quick wit
and exceptional intellect endeared him to many: to be fair, others
found his honesty abrasive.
George O’Bannon is survived by his four sons and
three daughters-in-law, Patrick and Pia Deinhardt of Philadelphia,
Colin of Columbus, Ohio, Sean and Nancy of Boca Raton, Florida and
Casey and Susan of Philadelphia; two grandchildren; and his longtime
companion Arlene Cooper of Manhattan.
The family requests that those who wish to make
memorial donations direct them to the Textile Department of the
Indianapolis Museum of Art, to which George recently bequeathed a
substantial portion of his collection of Central Asian textiles and
costumes. Donations can be sent to the George W. O’Bannon
Memorial Fund, c/o Niloo Paydar, Textile Department Curator,
Indianapolis Museum of Art, 1200 West 38th St., Indianapolis, IN
46208-4196.
Written by Colin A. O'Bannon
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| From www.peacecorpsonline.org
I had the great good fortune to have George
O"Bannon as an Associate Director in Afghanistan in most of my two
years there as country director. He was an extraordinarily sensitive
man and had a great rapport with the many health care volunteers, most
of whom were women under great stress. Worrking as nurses, vaccinators
and medical technicians, they were sometimes harassed by poor working
conditions ( no alcohol, clean syringes, autoclaves that didn't work,
vaccines that had not been refrigerated, even buggy whipped.) George
took it all in stride, calmly reassured them, worked on improving their
situation, and most of all was a wonderful listener. We met again about
a year before he died in Philadelphia and he displayed the same
calmness in his own disease that he had when others met with great
difficulty. I missed him greatly when he finished his tour in
Afghanistan, and again when he passed away, just as I had Helen whose
good humor, intelligence and caring was always there. They were surely
as good staff members as anyone could ask for!
Walter Blass
Country Director/Afghanistan 1966-68
Walter Blass was kind enough to allow me
to reprint this.
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Persian
Rugs the O'Connell Guides
Tabriz
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Isfahan
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Hamadan
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Mashad
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Ardabil
Rugs
Lylyan
Rugs
Turkmen
Rugs
Persian Rugs
Turkish Rugs
Suzani
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Rugs
Persian
Carpets
Baluch Rugs,
The Qashqai and
Qashqai Rugs
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