Saturday, June 23, 2018

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Rugs and Textiles go Vertical as Wall Art

In a recent presentation at ABC Carpet & Home, Dutch trend forecaster and champion of contemporary textile design, Lidewij Edelkoort announced that ‘Textiles will govern the century.’ Softwear, Edelkoort’s installation with Google at Rossana Orlandi for Milan Design Week, revisited her 1998 prediction of how we will live with technology and focused on how tactility and textiles will help this integration. Textiles—be they artworks, hand-knotted rugs, wall coverings, wall hangings or fabric panels—are growing in importance for our living spaces for many reasons.  Textiles have adorned and aided our home environments for hundreds of years. If you have ever spent time in the tapestry rooms at the V&A in London, New York’s Met Cloisters or some stately home with tapestries furnishing the walls then you will have some appreciation for the benefits textiles can offer an interior space. Now in the 21st century, the appeal of contemporary tapestries is growing and through events such as Art Basel Miami Beach and the Venice Biennale, it is clear to see that the international design and art elites have embraced. In Finland we have an old tradition of hanging rugs on the walls and they have been making a comeback lately wall hangings and textile art. In the last ten years, American fibre artist Sheila Hicks has become an important name in the art world while the digital tapestries of Danish weaver Grethe Sørensen have won much international acclaim and Finnish designer Kustaa Saksi’s vibrant Hypnopompic wall hangings have been exhibited in museums across the globe.  Textile art has also had a major boost from the trend for handmade goods and craft. Creatives Milla Novo and Windy Chien both use rope in macramé-esque wall art that has nothing of the 70s hippy vibe. Portuguese textile artist Vanessa Barragão creates her tapestries by hand for clients’ houses or interior designers. Her most recent work Coral Reef highlights the plight of the world’s coral reefs due to global warming. ‘A lot of my clients do feel connected with this cause and want to have a piece of this ecosystem in their homes,’ Barragão explains. As well as the craft aesthetic, for a number of years interior trends forecasts have been playing around with the concepts of ‘global’ and ‘textures’, encouraging a greater use of rugs and textiles, often with more traditional patterns and designs.

For the original version including any supplementary images or video, visit https://archinect.com/news/article/150068760/rugs-and-textiles-go-vertical-as-wall-art

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