
Monostriped Landscape
is a textile object loosely inspired by the principles of Unism formulated by Władysław Strzemiński – an approach that seeks unity, continuity, and the reduction of compositional hierarchy. The work unfolds as a rhythmic field of stripes, where repetition becomes a landscape rather than a pattern, and surface replaces narrative as the primary carrier of meaning.
Executed as a faux chenille quilt, the textile combines cotton, linen, and polyamide into a dense yet subtle structure that oscillates between softness and precision. Color and texture are restrained, allowing materiality and tactile depth to define the work’s presence. Rather than depicting a specific place, the piece evokes an abstracted terrain—one that emerges through perception, touch, and duration.
The textile was selected for the 8th European Quilt-Triennial and presented at the Kurpfälzisches Museum in Heidelberg,
Kreismuseum Zons Dormagen, and the Textile Museum St. Gallen, situating the work within a broader European discourse on contemporary textile art.
Monostriped Landscape | cotton, linen, polyamide | faux chenille quilt | 134 × 117 × 1 cm | 2020

