additional

Tap anywhere to exit zoom.

In stock Please contact us for more information.
Request Information Added

Please proceed to Request Info page.

View all carpets

Exhibitions

 

The Ground of Things

April 7 – May 17 2026
Opening Hours Monday–Friday: 10am–6pm
London Craft Week weekend (May 16–17): 11am–5pm
Charles Burnand Gallery, 27 Whitfield Street, London UK, W1T 2SE

 

FJ Hakimian and Charles Burnand Gallery present The Ground of Things, a new exhibition by American, Kent-based artist Dawn Bendick. Marking a pivotal expansion of her practice into textile, the exhibition introduces Bendick's first body of hand-made rugs, alongside new large-scale sculptural glass works.

Dawn Bendick

Best known for her sculptural practice in kiln-formed glass, Bendick approaches textile through the same lens of material intelligence, precision, and chromatic control. Her rugs translate a sculptural way of thinking into woven form - works that occupy the ground while retaining a strong sense of volume, rhythm, and presence. Colour is treated not as surface decoration, but as structure, depth, and movement.

Dawn Bendick

Bendick's engagement with textile has deep roots, spanning early studies at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York, professional work within the fashion and interiors industries, and later experimentation with digital sound and animation. This trajectory led her to the Material Futures programme at Central Saint Martins, where she began working with light, programming, and glass, developing her now-signature use of dichroic materials. The Ground of Things draws these threads together, positioning textile not as a departure, but as a natural extension of her sculptural practice.

The rugs are produced through FJ Hakimian's Custom Carpets programme by a Tibetan rug-making workshop in Nepal, operating within a lineage rooted in traditional Tibetan weaving techniques. Crafted from wool and silk using methods such as Senneh looping and small-batch pot dyeing, each work reflects a meticulous, multi-stage process and a deep respect for material and craft.

Dawn Bendick

Alongside the rugs, the exhibition features new kiln-formed glass sculptures, fully cast in England using a technique deeply embedded in British craft heritage. Presented across two gallery spaces, The Ground of Things brings glass, textile, colour, and form into dialogue, offering a meditation on how sculptural thinking can move seamlessly between mediums with clarity and authority.

Dawn Bendick

Photo Credit: Penguins Egg Studio & Charles Burnand Gallery