Unravelled Backgrounds
Client:
Zarya Centre for Contemporary Art, Vladivostok, RU
Year:
"Whether as clothing or interior décor elements, textiles have always enjoyed a particular closeness to the human body, sharing overlapping lifespans with its users as a material witness to an individual's life. For this aspect, nearly everyone can think of at least one such item, which may have long since lost its practical function but remains difficult to toss out, if only for all the associated emotions and memories.
Elena Redaelli's practice picks up on these associative properties of textiles and the various processes of working with fabrics. An artist-nomad, Redaelli spent most of her life in her homeland of Italy, then moved to the north of Europe, where she lived for five years in Norway, before departing for Asia, where she has been travelling recently, participating in festivals and artist residencies in China, Taiwan, Australia. Her most meaningful projects engage with the local audience, fostering dialogues and interactions only possible within a collective. In this spirit of collaboration, Redaelli shares the authorship of her works with everyone who contributes to the process of their creation.
Redaelli's site-specific sculptures and installations are created through sustained engagement with the place (environmental art) and the community (workshops & programming). As the ZARYA artist residency is based on the grounds of a former garment factory, the artist decided to use the opportunity to reflect on used fabrics found in Vladivostok. While artefacts from the building's past no longer exist, the factory maintains an archive of documentation and photographs. In this sense, the artist's project offers a symbolic return to the site's memory.
"Unravelled Backgrounds" centres on the processed and modified surface of the carpet, divided into several sections. The lower third of the carpet consists of unwoven threads, revealing the weaving structure and thus hinting at the traces of the intricate labour invested into the production of each interior object – even those produced on a mass scale. The artist left the central section untouched to emphasize the original Middle Eastern-inflected pattern around the edges. The upper section comprises a mosaic of the patches produced by participants in Redaelli's textile processing workshops, conducted weekly at the artist residency this past month. Each element produced is accompanied by personal stories or comments from the participants. The display also includes the found uniform of a student of the Maritime Academy, embellished with threads of the carpet using a felting technique.
The artist found her inspiration for this project in photographs of the interiors of Soviet homes. Carpets, which were churned out in mass quantities by the factories of the Southern Republics of the USSR, covered not only the floors of Khrushchyovka apartments typical of the Post-War period but also the walls, where they were strung up like tapestries. Besides the utilitarian functions of insulation and soundproofing, these carpets wielded a symbolic value as objects indicative of the household's financial status. Even though these carpets are considered horrifically outdated and kitschy today, for most people living in Russia, these interior elements are still identified as the quintessential backdrops of one's day-to-day routines.
Redaelli first turns to textiles and fabrics for the rich emotional associations inherent to used, worn or outdated materials. Within her projects, personal narratives – shared by her collaborators and those that will never be told – become the threads comprising the canvas of human history.
The ZARYA artist residency would like to extend its gratitude to the Vladivostok-based "Fashion Foolish," an initiative that collects used clothing and textile materials for further distribution and use in art and design projects, for its invaluable help in gathering materials.