
TEXTILE AS SPATIAL SURFACE
HAND-DYED GRADIENT ROOM DIVIDER
A textile room divider defined by hand-dyed gradients that move from deep, saturated tones to near transparency. Through controlled dye application, colour is built in layers, allowing soft transitions and subtle variations that make each panel unique.
The work functions as a spatial element, creating visual depth and gentle transitions without fully enclosing or separating the room. Positionedbetween textile design and interior architecture, it defines space through translucency and structure. Produced using fibre-reactive pigments and assembled with traditional pojagi seaming, the divider combines precise craftsmanship with organic colour movement.
Magdalena Keller is a textile artist and interior architect working with material-driven, site-specific practices, using textile structures to respond to spatial design and light. She holds a degree in Textile and Interior Architecture from Konstfack – University of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm, and has a background in product design within fashion, informing a practice that moves between construction, surface, and bodily experience.
Address:
Industricentralen, Hudiksvallsgatan 4, third floor
Tuesday-Friday: 11.00-19.00
Saturday: 11.00-17.00
