When a Wall Becomes Part of the Space
A wall is never neutral. This one was waiting.
The piece was developed in response to the architecture, not to fill it. Scale, movement, and material were decided before color.
From a distance, the work reads as one gesture. Up close, the surface reveals weight, density, and time.
Textile allows for something other materials don’t:
-it absorbs light rather than reflecting it,
-it softens acoustics without losing presence,
-it holds tension while remaining tactile.
The wall doesn’t act as a backdrop here. It becomes part of the composition.
This kind of work asks the space to slow down. To hold still for a moment.
It isn’t meant to be decorative. It’s meant to be lived with.
For those working with interiors where detail matters,
and where restraint is part of the language.
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📌 For inquiries about site-specific textile work, reach out directly