Crying Red Dragon costume by Tasha Kapyushion from Belarus. who makes objects, clothing, and costume to explore themes of identity, individuality and freedom.
Friday, 10 May 2019
Tasha Kapyushon I
Crying Red Dragon costume by Tasha Kapyushion from Belarus. who makes objects, clothing, and costume to explore themes of identity, individuality and freedom.
Wednesday, 17 April 2019
Angélique-Marguerite du Coudray
The incredible, beautiful, creative, sculptural, stitched learning aids created by Angélique-Marguerite du Coudray (1712-1789) to teach midwifery to rural French women in the 18th Century. Angélique-Marguerite was born into a prominent medical family and by 25 had completed her medical training and exams, just before the authorities to banned instruction of female midwives. In 1759 she was commissioned by the king to instruct midwifery to peasant women in an attempt to reduce infant mortality. For the next 24 years, she traveled throughout France sharing her extensive knowledge.
To help her teach rural midwives, Angélique-Marguerite created various stitched models and a full-size obstetric model, which she called "the machine". It was a model of a woman's lower body, made of fabric, leather and stuffing. Thank you
Wednesday, 27 March 2019
Alison Lowery
In Irish artist, Alison Lowry’s new exhibition "(A)dressing our Hidden Truths" she has used clothing to transcend time and tell difficult stories from Ireland's recent past. Alison used a French technique called 'Pate de verre', a paste of ground glass to encase textiles. The exhibition is on at the National Museum of Ireland until May
Above and below: survivor Diane Croghan, who stayed in a Magdalene Laundry
Below are some of Alison's cut paper pieces.

Friday, 18 January 2019
Scottish Sampler Exhibition
Above and Below: Isabella Cook
This week I managed to get a rushed peek at the exhibition 'Embroidered Stories' at the National Museum of Scotland it is on until 21st April 2019. It features a collection of Scottish samplers gathered over many years by Leslie B Hurst. They were even more incredible in their fineness and detail but also the wonderful stories of the creators often very young girls. I have to go back again and read more stories and wonder further at the incredible skill of these young women.
The two samplers above were most probably inspired by the Queen's Zebra gifted to her by George III in 1762.
Above: Artist unknown The London Magazine 1762
Above: A McGilly 1815. Below: Mary Robert 1767
Sunday, 13 January 2019
Helen Storey
Professor Helen Storey has been announced as the first Artist in Residence at Za'atari Refugee Camp for 2019 to cocreate fashion and design projects with Syrian women and their children.
Wednesday, 2 January 2019
Louise Gardiner
Louise Gardiner's responce to the The Womankind Pukka project is a cape of empowerment. A visual representation of the ingredients in womankind tea and a meditation on what we put into our bodies.
"Stitched from the ground up and inspired by 21 natural, health giving ingredients, the centrepiece for the campaign has taken the form of a beautiful cape and aims to capture all that is feminine, powerful and potent about woman kind. This isn’t about superficial beauty, it’s about nurturing individuality and about taking a step back from the norm and thinking about what we’ve all got to contribute. To encourage a gentle more charismatic femininity, it’s not about sex and celebrity, It’s about the essence of being female and being in touch with your own true nature and creativity.
Having been deeply influenced by teaching women all around the world, tapping into this amazing sisterhood and realising how much we all have in common, this cape is a joyful celebration of all those women that have been and all those yet to come. Anyone and everyone was welcome to try the cape on and feel like that queen, warrior, nurturer, rockstar; any and all of those wonderful roles that we play."
Monday, 31 December 2018
Marie Lieb
An assemblage of torn fabric strips from the bed sheets of Marie Lieb. Little is known of this woman, who created this startling display on the floor of a psychiatric ward where she was interned in 1894. The two installations are on two different floors, possibly public spaces in the hospital as they are larger than an individual room for someone interned. they include gradations of fabric sizes from strips to thread and include writing.
This leads to the assumptions that Lieb wanted to make a statement not only for herself but also for others, and that this statement was not only about claiming space but also about sending a message, if unreadable to others. In this quality these floor pieces remind me of secret rituals, like witches’ writings on the ground. It is imaginable that the patient was convinced what she did exerted magical power. Thomas Röske
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