Betil Dagdelen on the hunt for inspiration
Modern Nomad
-
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
In Betil Dagdelen's studio
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Dagdelen shares sketches from her journal
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Explaining the process
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Textile studies
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Sketches
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
The lovely Betil Dagdelen
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Dagdelen sits in front of her latest project
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Betil with Untitled, 2014 by Virginia Overton at Storm King Art Center. Courtesy the artist and Mitchell Innes & Nash
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Anna and Betil with Untitled, 2014 by Virginia Overton at Storm King Art Center <br><i>Courtesy the artist and Mitchell Innes & Nash
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Pyramidian, 1987/1998 by Mark di Suvero at Storm King Art Center<br><i>Storm King Art Center: Gift of the Ralph E. Ogden Foundation, Inc.
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
On the grounds at Storm King Art Center
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
On the grounds at Storm King Art Center
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Jambalaya, Neruda's Gate, and Mozart's Birthday by Mark di Suvero. All works lent by the artist and Spacetime CC except Mozart's Birthday: Storm King Art Center, Gift of Maurice Cohen and Margo Cohen.
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono<
-
In the field by Neruda's Gate and Mozart's Birthday by Mark di Suvero. Neruda's Gate lent by the artist and Spacetime CC; Mozart's Birthday: Storm King Art Center, Gift of Maurice Cohen and Margo Cohen.
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
On the grounds by Mozart's Birthday, 1989, by Mark di Suvero.
Storm King Art Center: Gift of Maurice Cohen and Margo Cohen. Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Three Legged Buddha (detail), 2007, by Zhang Huan. Gift of Zhang Huan and Pace Gallery. © Zhang Huan Studio; courtesy Pace Gallery.
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Three Legged Buddha (detail), 2007, by Zhang Huan. Gift of Zhang Huan and Pace Gallery. <br><i>© Zhang Huan Studio; courtesy Pace Gallery
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Long Island Buddha, 2010-11, by Zhang Huan
© Zhang Huan Studio; courtesy the artist. Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Spheres, 1973-75/1985, by Grace Knowlton.
Storm King Art Center: Gift of the artist and the Ralph E. Ogden Foundation, Inc. Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
Betil Dagdelen with Adonai, 1970-71 (refabricated 2000), by Alexander Liberman. Storm King Art Center: Gift of the Ralph E. Ogden Foundation, Inc.
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono
-
The Ionic columns at Storm King
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono<
-
On the grounds at Storm King Art Center
Photo © Giada Paoloni for L'AB/Pamono<
Betil Dagdelen can’t stop thinking about patterns. She sees them in the stacked stones of a wall tracing a countryside road, the ebb and flow of rolling hills and daily rituals, and the constellations of her own intricately woven furniture designs. The Turkish-born designer is ever conscious of the natural and constructed patterns that surround her; mindful of those she wishes to emulate—and those she'd rather break.
“It’s all one—my work and my life,” she says to me as we wander the grounds at Storm King, a humbling, 500-acre sculpture garden an hour north of New York City. Dagdelen sees the act of exploration—breaking routines and seeking out inspiration—as inextricably bound to her creative process. Navigating Storm King’s woodlands, fields, and hills dotted with towering sculptures by some of our era’s most acclaimed artists, Dagdelen is like a kid in a candy store. In contrast to the peaceful atmosphere of her colorful, Williamsburg loft-studio, today she is excited and her eyes intense as she soaks in our surroundings. “Nature and history are my greatest inspirations. I like the idea that we’re each just one tiny piece of these larger puzzles.”
Dagdelen's furniture designs honor that notion of connectivity as well. “I believe everything you make and the materials you use have an energy to them,” she says. For that reason, she primarily repurposes midcentury, iron rod chair frames, into which she expertly weaves yarn seats, backs, and armrests. She gathers her yarn from traditional Turkish and Native American weavers. Because Dagdelen works within fixed frames (as opposed to a loom, where, she explains, “I’d have more tension control”), she switches between thinner and thicker threads to give each piece its solidity. The results are soft, pretty, and impressively strong. And every piece features patterns—mainly Navajo-inspired—that ultimately break or shift at least once, drawing the eye in unexpected directions.
The self-taught designer (“I have a pretty impressive collection of old, how-to-weave books”) explains her pattern variation this way: “Once I fully understand and am comfortable with a particular pattern, that’s when I present a new one. It’s quite hard, because you know it’s going great, you know it looks beautiful, and you know you do it well. But that’s the moment you must change. You must present a new challenge and form a new pattern. It’s just an ongoing process. In the end, collages of patterns are far more interesting. And again, not just in textiles or drawings, but in our lives as well.”
She goes on, “For every pattern to form, there must be a set of rules. My whole life, I’ve felt challenged by the number of rules out there—some unspoken, some spoken—and it’s a big part of the reason why I left my country and I’m happier in America; not that there aren’t rules here, but they are different. I’ve realized that to break a pattern, you must really understand it. So in my work and life, I make my own patterns and then I break them.”
To that end, Dagdelen has embraced an increasingly off-the-grid lifestyle over the past several years, driven by her need for inspiration, self-reflection, and self-betterment. “I don’t commit anymore to any one place,” she says. “I honestly feel like I live everywhere.”
Dagdelen was born in the beach town of Izmir, Turkey. She moved to New York in 2001, and began working as a production and set decorator for films, music videos, and fashion photography (a highly collaborative role that nicely complements her relatively solitary weaving practice). She travels frequently, but continues to use New York as a base. Notable stops along the way have included a house and studio in Saugerties, New York (“where I hand-built my first Navajo loom”) and two years living in a home built from shipping containers in Socrates Sculpture Park.
In 2009, in the dead of winter, finding herself alone in her then apartment with several boxes stuffed with leftover yarn from a photo shoot, Dagdelen decided to try weaving, just for fun. She covered the tops of two metal, round-topped stools with brightly colored yarn, and knew right away that she’d found a lifelong passion.
Not long after, she decided to make her first chair, and spent months working away on what became the Reeve Chair in her upstate New York studio. As soon as it was complete, Dagdelen put herself to the ultimate routine-change; she packed up her car, her Basset Hound Fred, and a teardrop trailer to drive cross-country. She made her way south and then as far as Taos, New Mexico, where she spent time with traditional Navajo weavers, learning their weaving and dyeing techniques and bartering her assistance in exchange for some materials and a place to stay. She went on to Santa Monica, where she found the chair frames that would become part of her next series, the aptly titled Desert Weave Chairs. She camped in the Malibu hills while she painted the frames, and then proceeded to Joshua Tree, where a friend (sculptor and installation artist Andrea Zittel) lent her space to work. Ultimately, almost a year later, she made her way back to Brooklyn.
This nomadic approach to life and work directly inspires Dagdelen’s woven patterns; she can easily cite each of the people, places, and concepts that have served as catalysts for specific designs. “Weaving reflects where you are in life,” she notes. “My work is very much a diary of my life.” And later, “I can understand if someone hears what I do and thinks, she’s all over the place. But for me, every piece and place feeds into the whole. I’m better at all of it because it is varied.”
What further adventures could the future possibly hold? “One of my dreams is to have a studio in the desert. And also, one day, to even hire a boat and a captain and sail up the Mississippi River, so I can weave all the way as we go, letting my surroundings inspire the patterns. That sounds incredible to me.” But Dagdelen’s not in any sort of rush. “One thing always leads to the next,” she says knowingly. Whatever will be, one thing’s for sure; the furniture will continue to tell the story.
-
Text by
-
Anna Carnick
Anna is Pamono’s Managing Editor. Her writing has appeared in several arts and culture publications, and she's edited over 20 books. Anna loves celebrating great artists, and seriously enjoys a good picnic.
-
-
Images by
-
Giada Paoloni
Giada is an Italian-born photographer and stylist with a passion for travel, food, and art.
-