textile terrains: alexandra kehayoglou on weaving memories of forgotten landscapes (2024)

the very first time artist alexandra kehayoglou built a carpet with her hands, it was an innate and instinctive attraction. ‘I was connecting with my paternal grandmother, a fierce woman whom I had never met,’ she tells designboom in an interview. ‘she managed to raise four children and build a company starting with a loom she carried with her across the atlantic ocean. I knew there was something there, it felt right. it was like discovering a close friend. something ancestral awoke in me and it all started to make sense’. since then, the argentine textile artist has rooted her practice in the use of available materials and existing resources to create intricately woven landscapes depicting grasslands, fields, and disappearing terrain. her craft has become a symbolic outcry against deforestation and devastation, and a call for environmental awareness. ‘I believe that art can be a mirror, and I try with my work to reflect our humanity in relation with the landscape,’ she shares. ‘my carpets, thus, became instruments for documenting ‘minor’ aspects of the land which were otherwise overlooked as irrelevant. a focus on its micro-narratives that would open new doors for possible ecological futures.’

in an interview with designboom, alexandra kehayoglou spoke about her connection to natural cycles, living on an island in the parana wetlands, and the importance her work places on the preservation of the environment.

textile terrains: alexandra kehayoglou on weaving memories of forgotten landscapes (1)
2020 work from the series prayer rugs | all images courtesy of alexandra kehayoglou

DB: what aspects of your background and upbringing have shaped your creative principles and philosophies?

alexandra kehayoglou (AK): I am the middle daughter, the black sheep. I had to find my space in a family that was not particularly traditional, where a generational gap distanced me from my father. he was 50 when I was born. he was raised by two greek exiles who got into an arranged marriage to start a new life in argentina.

this meant a constant challenge. I have always had my idea of things, and a personal perspective. I connected with animals and plants from a very small age, and art and self expression had always been a shelter where I could stay still. silence and introspection always were safe places. I grew up thinking I could become whoever I wanted. there was this pressure to continue with the family tradition of the carpet company. but it somehow didn’t really feel right.

there has always been this voice inside me. one that whispers, ‘through here’ and when I, for some reason, lose track — it starts to scream, ‘through here! through here!’ this has made me stay focused in this direction. I had to build a personal path. my work and me being an artist didn’t really fit in a traditional or conventional way. I was always pulled by a high sense of ethics that corresponds with this inner voice. this is probably why I started to worry about ecology at a very young age. in the 90s, we started composting organic waste. this was not common in my country back then. I was born in a house with a very large garden, background, a forest, a farm — in the suburbs, right next to the river. I guess this connected me with natural cycles and tuning a dialogue with a natural world.

textile terrains: alexandra kehayoglou on weaving memories of forgotten landscapes (2)
refugio para un recuerdo (shelter for a memory), 2012
textile tapestry (handtuft system), wool | 270 x 500 cm

DB: what draws you to textile materials as an artistic medium, and what are their personal meanings to you?

AK: I was not drawn particularly to textiles when I studied arts at university. this is something that started to develop in me in my late 20s. I sort of felt a need to incorporate available materials — existing resources that were there, close, being wasted was my way of connecting to this idea of not ruining more of the world with my art back then. but when I started to manipulate them, the first time I got to build a carpet with my hands, not really knowing what I was doing, I had no training nor help at all. I knew there was something there, it felt right, it was like discovering a close friend. something ancestral awoke in me and it all started to make sense.

textile terrains: alexandra kehayoglou on weaving memories of forgotten landscapes (3)
refugio para un recuerdo II (shelter for a memory II), 2016
textile tapestry (handtuft system), wool | 206 x 140 cm

AK (continued): textiles weren’t so fashionable back then. it was 2006 — carpets were, for many, an uncomfortable item you had to take care of. art was really very far away from a carpet. I was working at the family company and this was a thing. but this connection felt stronger than anything else and it simply made so much sense. I was connecting with my paternal grandmother. a fierce woman whom I had never met. when she got to argentina she met my grandfather, he was not particularly a very graceful man. she managed to raise four children and build a company starting with a loom she carried with her across the atlantic ocean. this loom turned into a shelter. she was able to overcome so much being mistreated by this man. these were difficult years. being an exile in a new land. I have connected with her story and relieved things with her. it was hard for me to be an artist in my family.

I had to face many demons. my grandmother represents this luminous aspect, but there’s also this dark side. my father supported my work, he was always there pushing his own limits of understanding for me to be who I really wanted to be. but he got very sick five years ago with ALS, and this support disappeared. the family company turned into this dark entity that wanted to devour my work. so I’ve been staying as far as possible. trying to feed my grandmother’s memory. textiles carry on things. karma is one of them.

textile terrains: alexandra kehayoglou on weaving memories of forgotten landscapes (4)
kehayoglou wrapped an MVRDV-designed theater in taiwan in textured green tapestries
image by JUT group | read more on designboom here

DB: where do you work on your projects, and what are the creative strategies you adopt when working?

AK: I don’t really feel I have strategies. it depends on the project, if it is a specific situation of an ecocide, or just a representation of a landscape. I do work a lot with intuition. I try to connect deeply with what resonates inside, and to tune into a message that comes from the land — lately I’ve been doing this a lot. coherence is very important for me, it has to make sense. the last project I have been working on, on this island we live in when we are in buenos aires, a land that belongs to an ecosystem that has been altered and destroyed. I started to focus more on this.

in the last two years, I’ve been living on an island. the pandemic and COVID forced my family to fulfill this dream of living in nature. this is a land that conforms to a very unique landscape within buenos aires. the wetland.

textile terrains: alexandra kehayoglou on weaving memories of forgotten landscapes (5)
kehayoglou used a hand-tufting process to fabricate the wool textiles that cover the walls
image by JUT group | read more on designboom here

DB: how planned is the configuration of each piece? is there room for spontaneity and improvisation while you are working?

AK: some works are carefully planned, milimetrically, but it’s textiles and there’s always some spark of spontaneity and definitely improvisation.

ever since projects started to acquire large dimensions, and I incorporated assistants to help me produce the works, this meant losing control of every single detail as well — and it actually got more interesting.

textile terrains: alexandra kehayoglou on weaving memories of forgotten landscapes (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Otha Schamberger

Last Updated:

Views: 5990

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (75 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Otha Schamberger

Birthday: 1999-08-15

Address: Suite 490 606 Hammes Ferry, Carterhaven, IL 62290

Phone: +8557035444877

Job: Forward IT Agent

Hobby: Fishing, Flying, Jewelry making, Digital arts, Sand art, Parkour, tabletop games

Introduction: My name is Otha Schamberger, I am a vast, good, healthy, cheerful, energetic, gorgeous, magnificent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.