Textile Protest

I’m pleased to share some very exciting news about Textile Protest by Julia Triston – it’s one of the best books I’ve read in a very long time – and you can get your own copy here.

Textile Protest
Textile Protest

Batsford Books reached out to me in late 2024. They’d seen a blogpost I’d written on ‘The Grenfell Memorial Quilt‘ and wondered if I could assist them on a piece they were creating about the Quilt.

Grenfell Memorial Quilt in the Textile Protest book
Grenfell Memorial Quilt in the Textile Protest book

The blogpost centred on my video interview with the project’s founder and ‘artivist’ Tuesday Greenidge (whose daughter escaped from the tower fire) and by kind permission of Tuesday, included several close up photos of the Quilt .

Two photos included in the Textile Protest book
Two photos included in the Textile Protest book

Tuesday kindly gave Batsford and myself permission to share these images in the book.

“This book is ‘a landmark exploration of how textiles have been used for political protest in the 20th and 21st centuries’. It was an intense project to research and write, and I’m very proud of the final edition, which will be published in August this year by Batsford Books. This book is timely, and it wouldn’t have been possible to illustrate without all the creative and talented artists, activists, protesters, campaigners and curators who are part of it. … Keep on doing what you all do so brilliantly – our world needs your protest and artworks.”~ Juliia Triston.

Photo credit - line 4 & 5
Photo credit – line 4 & 5

Grenfell Tower Fire

The Grenfell Memorial Quilt honours the 72 lives lost in the Grenfell Tower fire in 2017.

The following is courtesy of the London Museum.

On 14 June 2017, a fire spread through Grenfell Tower in North Kensington, killing 72 people. It was one of modern London’s worst disasters, and highlighted the city’s severe housing inequalities.

The Grenfell fire was started by an electrical fault in a fridge-freezer in one of the fourth-floor flats. Cladding attached to the outside of the building set alight, spreading the fire between floors.

The fire was first reported by a 999 call just before 1am. The fire reached the roof half an hour later, and by 4am, covered the entire building.

The first firefighters reached the tower five minutes after the 999 call. They rescued 65 people, while over a hundred escaped themselves. The firefighters showed extreme bravery. The call handlers battled against severe pressure.

Until 2.47am, they advised residents to “stay put” in their flats. The Grenfell Tower inquiry found that this advice should have changed an hour earlier, when it was clear that the fire had spread.

The inquiry found that firefighters were not properly prepared by their bosses for the situation they faced. There was no specific plan for evacuating Grenfell Tower. Vulnerable and disabled residents weren’t given personalised guidance beforehand.

In the 2010s, aluminium and plastic panels had been attached to the 1970s tower block. This cladding helped the fire spread.

Narrative Textiles – Book Review

Ailish Henderson is an exciting young textile artist whose work is fun, quirky, tells interesting stories and uses a diverse range of media, though always grounded in cloth. In her Narrative Textiles book, she explains her working methods and how readers can harness them in their own work to create unique, deeply personal textile art pieces. She encourages readers to draw on your own personal memorabilia to create work that is meaningful – the intention is to capture a moment in time, a memory to treasure, a look on a face, a glance of love from a pet.

Ailish Henderson: https://www.ailishhenderson.com

Narrative Textiles

Throughout the book the author encourages working with freedom, instinct and honesty, bringing in a wealth of different techniques to create authentic stories in cloth, and most importantly, enjoy yourself along the way.

Narrative Textiles Book by Ailish Henderson: https://amzn.to/3Q3D8Pw 

Narrative Textiles Book by Ailish Henderson
Narrative Textiles Book by Ailish Henderson

Along with work from the author, the book also showcases work from textile artists such as Aran Illingworth, Jenni Dutton, Woo Jin Joo and Jordan Cunliffe.

Ailish Henderson is an artist, researcher and teacher who primarily works in textiles. Ailish exhibits widely, including at the Knitting and Stitching Show, and provides lectures and masterclasses to various organizations including the Embroiderers’ Guild and the WI. She has had three solo UK exhibitions to date, and has also exhibited key works in Rome. She is the former editor-in-chief for the Mr X Stitch website and her work has been featured in numerous publications, including Embroidery, Selvedge and Daphne’s Diary.

Other Book Reviews

A review of Soulful Stitch by Cas Holmes and Deena Beverley, is available here. The review is by author Deena Beverley and features many of the artworks featured in the publication.

Soulful Stitch – Book Review

Artist and author Deena Beverley reviews her latest book, Soulful Stitch, which she co-authored with artist Cas Holmes.

The book is a thoughtful, meditative guide to the ways creative textile art can soothe and comfort us during challenging times. The authors share how to use found objects, repurposed threads and personal items to create deep emotional resonance in your own work.

Soulful Stitch
Soulful Stitch

Soulful Stitch Book: https://amzn.to/3BnMD8m 

The Authors

Cas Holme’s work often contains snippets of text or discarded materials that have associations or conjure up memories. There is always a dialogue with the materials she uses. They bring their own history which is woven into the work. These collections of ephemera might seem meaningless but their apparent banality is open-ended. They are available to stimulate the imagination through the poetry of ordinariness. Everything has a connection and each viewer makes their own connections. Cas is author of Embroidering the Everyday.

Cas Holmes https://casholmes.uk/ 

Deena Beverley’s passion is for ‘making the ordinary extraordinary’ by taking a little time to inject a personal touch into the mundane. ‘Luxe for less’ is her personal mantra; often finding its form in repurposed items or reworked found materials. 

Deena Beverley  https://deenabeverley.com/ 

Both authors have recent lived experience of having to navigate new paths through big life challenges, making this book particularly heartfelt. It truly demonstrates how even in the toughest times, creativity in textile art can keep you afloat.  Packed with practical ideas, techniques and inspiration from two acclaimed textile artists. 

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