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Commissions

DAISY PARRIS
Kiss The Storm

2025

Textorial is delighted to launch with the commission of an exceptional 5 metre unique textile installation by British painter Daisy Parris. 

Marking the first time the artist has worked in the medium of textile, Kiss the Storm is an evolution of their large-scale abstract paintings. The installation pushes forward the material elements that exist in Parris’ paintings, interlacing threads of their daily practice of stitching, collage and text application with the woven form. 

There is an affinity to the ritual of textile in their work and this material masterpiece takes the next step in Parris’ practice, in providing a visual sensation that sets the form apart from painting. Hand-knotted, woven chains of varying thickness are interleaved to compose Parris’ visceral mark making in a textural relief surface. Parris has manipulated the textile, creating a surface that has become synonymous with their practice. 

 

Continuing to investigate narratives of queer identity and psychological highs and lows in their work, the slow process means many of life’s subjects are considered and physically worked through in the making. This piece is also rooted in the rural landscape in which they work, acknowledging the changes of the seasons, of weather and the catharsis of working with one’s hands in such a place. 

 

The installation was unveiled at the Censor’s Room in the Royal College of Physicians, Regent’s Park, London during Frieze week 2025.

 

Kiss The Storm by Daisy Parris is a commission for Textorial in collaboration with Sim Smith and Artwise Curators.

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About

About

A word born of the loom — from texere, “to weave.”

 

It speaks of threads crossing, fibres binding, the materiality of cloth. Yet it also gestures beyond fabric: to language, memory, and story. For just as a textile is woven from strands, so too is a life, a culture, a narrative.

 

Textorial is the quality of being interlaced — whether in warp and weft, or in the weaving together of ideas.

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© 2025 Textorial

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