Floor plan

Rug
Material: handspun Tibetian wool and silk

This large-scale hand knotted rug depicts the floor plans of Buckingham Palace. While accurate according to all available information, the layouts were mapped out by the public, leaving parts of the Royal Home a mystery. Wrapped in secrecy that people have tried to give structure to for centuries, the heritage of Buckingham Palace lies within the heritage of British Monarchy. With its 775 rooms that have hosted camels, elephants, idiosyncratic monarchs and misbehaving celebrities, it represents a colonial history that is now called heritage. The eccentric voyeurism of power has always been present in the cultural exchanges and historical readings around the world and with her carpets, Ulfsak critically engages with a historical narrative she has no direct connection to - most of the information comes from pop culture, media, history books and tabloids. Ulfsak is a tourist in this town. Using contemporary design, she brings out the surreal aspects of a space so idealised it has now become a playground - a space so surreal we pay for tours to walk through the palace like a funfair, while remaining a model for reflecting wider historical narratives. This floor map can partly be seen as the spatial representation of monarchy, partly as an archival map of centuries of British colonialism, and partly as a bad joke.

 
johanna töö.jpg
johanna töö.jpg

JOHANNA
ULFSAK

Designer - Johanna Ulfsak.jpg
 
 

Johanna Ulfsak is an artist and textile designer based in Tallinn, Estonia. Ulfsak combines and mixes traditional weaving techniques with contemporary art concepts to create unique items and installations that challenge the established boundaries between disciplines. Since 2020 she is a guest lecturer at Estonian Academy of Arts.