TOOLS
The Textile Society Annual Conference 2021, London, GB
13.11.2021

TOOLS - The Textile Society Annual Conference 2021, London, GB 13.11.2021

Facilitating, Photo Nathan Corum, 2021, Source: https://www.textilesociety.org.uk/event/annual-conference-2021

The Textile Society Annual Conference 2021 explores the theme of ‘Tools’ – their significance in the history of textiles and their influence on contemporary practice. From the simplicity of a darning needle held in the back pocket to the complexity of an industrial power loom, tools are the extension of our creativity, a connection between thinking and making, imagination and invention.

We are delighted to welcome our panel of eminent speakers who will bring to this event their knowledge of textiles and their personal experiences of the tools that created them.


Will Cruickshank

Will Cruickshank has a multidisciplinary practice which includes textiles, sculpture, film, photography, and printmaking, alongside machines and participatory works. In 2018-2019 he received the Arts Council England DYCP Award (Developing your Creative Practice) for his studio research. For five years Will rented three grain silos in Essex, and converted them into a studio where the spaces operated as laboratories and machine rooms. He has now relocated to Devon.

Will’s presentation will include images and films of his recent work in textiles – a record of an explorative journey through machine, material and technique, and an insight into how the evolution of his work is dependent upon the invention, or reappropriation, of devices and tools.


Daniel Harris

Daniel Harris established the London Cloth Company ten years ago – the first micro-mill to produce bespoke cloth in the capital. He specialises in quality woven cloth produced on his ever-expanding range of carefully restored shuttle looms, employing the same techniques that have not changed for decades. Clients range from Ally Capellino to Hardy Amies, from Lyle and Scott to Ralph Lauren.

Daniel will discuss his business which started as one 1920s loom in a small studio, and has gone on to encompass a sixty ton collection of restored working textile machinery dating from 1880-1990. It is a collection with the ability to weave fabrics of different qualities, supplying brands all over the world.


Tim Parry-Williams

Tim Parry-Williams is a studio weaver and Professor of Art: Textiles at the University of Bergen, Norway. He is a Trustee of the Crafts Study Centre and an Advisor to the European Textile Network (ETN). His collaborative exhibition project Plain Stripe Check opened at the Japan Folk Crafts Museum, Tokyo in 2007. It went on to tour the UK and Europe, drawing upon research with a network of museums and archive collections worldwide.

Tim’s portfolio career is centred on weaving – working by hand, indirectly through collaborative practice, in education and through cultural exchange. Opening and reaching into both literal and metaphorical toolboxes, Tim will reveal examples of the many objects employed in a largely autonomous practice, very much rooted in a rich, craft-based training, first in England and later in Japan.


Celia Pym

Celia Pym is an artist and Visiting Lecturer in Mixed Media Textiles at the Royal College of Art, London. In 2017 she was shortlisted for the Woman’s Hour Craft Prize and the inaugural Loewe Craft Prize. Her work has been exhibited internationally most recently in Waste Age, Design Museum London (2021), On Happiness: Joy and Tranquility, Wellcome Collection, London (2021), Siblings, Trading Museum, CDG, Paris (2020) and Sewing Box for the Future, V&A Dundee (2020).

For the past fifteen years Celia has explored damage and repair in textiles – tracking down owners of garments, and using the question, “Do you have something with a hole in?” to meet people and invite conversation wider than just the damaged item.


Mary Schoeser

Mary Schoeser FRSA is an Honorary Senior Research Fellow at the V&A and President of the Textile Society, with fifty years of experience in writing, curating, lecturing and archival work. Among her 2021 projects are contributions to the exhibition Chintz: Cotton in Bloom (Fashion & Textile Museum) and an essay for the Archie Brennan: Tapestry goes Pop (Dovecot Studios) catalogue, as well as a chapter for a forthcoming publication on Bernat Klein. She is Patron of the Klein Foundation and the School of Textiles.

Taking tools for making textiles as a starting point, Mary’s lecture will explore what early archaeological finds tell us about how and what early humans created. Aside from examining surviving tools, her discussion will widen out to embrace a definition of ‘tool’ given by the Oxford English Dictionary, namely ‘…a thing (concrete or abstract) with which some operation is performed; a means of effecting something; an instrument.’

Timeline for 13th November 2021:
Registration and coffee: from 10.00 am
Conference 10.45 am - 5.00 pm

Costs for non-members: 49 – 89 Pounds

Location: Wellcome Collection, 183 Euston Road, London, GB

 

More information:
https://www.textilesociety.org.uk/event/annual-conference-2021

 

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