Darn it! Mending Club at Textile Arts Center

Sun Apr 07 2024 at 05:00 pm to 08:00 pm

505 Carroll St | Brooklyn

Textile Arts Center
Publisher/HostTextile Arts Center
Darn it! Mending Club at Textile Arts Center
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Coming together on the first Sunday of each month, we can explore mending as intervention through repairing our precious textiles.
About this Event

Mending is a form of resistance! Coming together at the Textile Arts Center on the first Sunday of each month, we can explore this intervention through the act of mending our precious textiles: forming relationships with our clothes, objects, and with each other. Pamphlets and examples of darning, mending, and sashiko stitching, as well as materials will be provided. Please bring yourself (and maybe a friend) and an object you wish to mend.

The history of mending and mending techniques in my practice has become a more specific facet of my ongoing interest in the gendering of fine art vs. craft throughout the centuries. The detailed hand stitching of mending scars naturally display the intimate relationship and innate sustainability humans used to have with their clothes. The very act of mending a textile today becomes a form of resistance in itself: resistance to the relationship- or lack thereof- we have with our belongings we are so quick to discard. When one actively chooses to mend a garment, saving it from the landfill, a relationship is thus formed. ‘Darn it’, like any mending act, looks to intervene in the rapid death cycle of consuming clothing today, and to help foster deeper relationships with one's objects as a whole. - by Martina Cox

Instructions from 'Mend! A Refashioning Manual and Manifesto' by Kate Sekules will be provided.

A little bit about our Co Hosts...

This month, welcome Taylor Telyan our first guest host for Darn it!

Taylor is a very familiar face at Darn It! and if you've been to one you've definitely had the pleasure of seeing some of her fabulous denim focused repair in real life. Taylor is a former screen printer turned textile designer based in New York with a specialty in denim repair+embroidery. Check out some of her work in the photos below.

Martina Cox is an artist based out of New York City. After graduating from the Cooper Union in 2018, Martina founded her eponymous clothing label, selling one-off garments made to order as a way to uphold slow fashion values. Since closing her business in 2021, Martina has continued to make work about fashion history and craft through Sculpture, Drawing and Performance. She hosts a monthly mending club that addresses ways we can heal relationships with objects we often deem as disposable.

Hekima Hapa is a Fashion Designer, social entrepreneur, author and Founder of the 22 year sustainable independent fashion brand inspired by Africa and the people of its diaspora, Harriet’s Alter Ego also known as Harriet’s by Hekima. In 2013, she founded Black Girls Sew, a nonprofit organization committed to positively impacting the lives of youth and families through education in sewing, design and entrepreneurship.

Kate Sekules is the author of 'MEND! A Refashioning Manual and Manifesto.' She is completing a doctorate in material culture at the Bard Graduate Center NYC with a dissertation titled "A History and Theory of Mending," teaches fashion history at Pratt, and a new course, "Mending Fashion" at Parsons. She is the founder of the crowd sourced world mending map visiblemending.org and MAWG, the Mending Archives Working Group, to make mends legible and searchable in museum contexts. She hosts #mendmarch on instagram


Event Photos
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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

505 Carroll St, 505 Carroll Street, Brooklyn, United States

Tickets

USD 10.00

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