Coherency, Faig Ahmed, 2016. Image Courtesy of Faig Ahmed Studio
Intricately patterned rugs glitch and pixelate in the fascinating fibrous constellations of Faig Ahmed. When you first see's work, it's hard to understand what you're looking at. The carpets look digitally rendered, as if a cheeky developer plugged data points emulating ancient tapestries into a software program and then scrambled the results. But although they look like computer-generated creations, Ahmed's intricate artworks are actually entirely woven by hand. It's a stark contrast between ancient carpet-weaving techniques from his native country of Azerbaijan and aggressively contemporary ideas of digital manipulation, pixelation, and distortion.On November 17, Ahmed opens a new solo show at Sapar Contemporary in New York City. Source Code is an interrogation of consciousness and language, drawing on the traditions of woven textiles. The show dissects our ideas of symbolism and communication, translating ancient modes of literally weaving stories into tapestries with the ways we present ideas in the digital age.Check out a selection of Ahmed's works being shown as part of Source Code below:Faig Ahmed's Source Code is on view at Sapar Contemporary in New York City from November 17, 2016–January 5, 2017. Click here for more information.Related:Our 11 Favorite Works from the Dallas Art Fair'Glitch Art Is Dead'Weaving the Future of Textiles with Google's Project Jacquard
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