The Textile Museum Journal: Between Ornament and Structure: Carpets in Modern Art and Architecture
As part of our online interview series for The Textile Museum Journal, contributing scholar Farniyaz Zaker explores the role of carpets in modern art and architecture. Drawing on Gottfried Semper’s idea that architecture has its roots in textiles, Zaker investigates how modern architecture and art use textiles — especially carpets — to shape our perception of space, creating a sense of enclosure and physicality.
Her research examines the carpet-inspired gardens created by Gabriel Guevrekian in 1920s France; the architecture of Belsize Park house in England, which Georgie Wolton built in 1976 to house her kilim collection; a 2010 art installation at Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie created by Rudolf Stingel; and the textile art of Anni Albers, as well as Zaker’s own art practice.
About The Textile Museum Journal
Our peer-reviewed journal is the leading publication for the exchange of textile scholarship in North America. Published each fall, it features research on the cultural, technical, historical and aesthetic significance of textiles from all around the world. Learn more about the journal
About Farniyaz Zaker
Farniyaz Zaker is an artist and lecturer in Persian Studies in Oxford University’s Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies. Zaker’s research and practice deal with the history and theory of architecture and textiles with regard to bodily, societal, spatial and linguistic practices. In 2015, Zaker completed a D.Phil. in fine art at the University of Oxford with the support of St. John’s College’s Lamb and Flag Graduate Scholarship. She has been a visiting research fellow at UCL’s Institute of Advanced Studies and a junior teaching fellow at the Ashmolean Museum’s Karsis Fellowship Programme.
How to Participate
This program will take place on Zoom. To participate, please register online, and we will email you a link and instructions for joining. Simply follow that link at the time the program starts (12 p.m. EST / 9 a.m. PST). When you register, you can also request to receive a reminder email one day before the program with the link included.
About the Series
In this virtual series, authors who contributed to volume 51 of The Textile Museum Journal discuss new research on historical textiles. Browse all interviews