Art gallery loom celebrates the world of weaving

A woman with a blue and white patterned outfit sat at a loom weavingImage source, Tegen Kimbley
Image caption,

Birmingham textile artist Mahawa Keita, who is artist in residence at Birmingham City University, will be working with the loom at the Ikon Gallery in August

  • Published

An exhibition celebrating the art of weaving has opened at a Birmingham gallery.

Thread the Loom, at the Ikon Gallery, sees weavers and university students taking part in mini-residencies - with their finished work then going on display.

A loom has been loaned to the Ikon by Birmingham City University (BCU) for the exhibition which runs until September.

"Ikon's weaver residencies will raise the profile of textiles generally, and weave specifically," said Zoe Hillyard, textile design senior lecturer at BCU.

Media caption,

A student weaver at work at Birmingham's Ikon Gallery

"At a time when creative subjects are under pressure within the school curriculum, it is a valuable opportunity to showcase the origins of the materials that feed more familiar design disciplines, including fashion and interior textiles," Ms Hillyard explained.

Ikon artistic director Linzi Stauvers added: "Thread the Loom, external is part of a series of Ikon exhibitions that celebrate the art school infrastructure of the West Midlands."

The gallery is also staging a summer exhibition called SPAN by Korean artist Seulgi Lee, external, which is her first solo UK show.

Multi-coloured yarn on a loom Image source, David Rowan
Image caption,

Weavers who will be based at the Ikon over the summer include Chantelle Folarin, Clare Langford, Andree Walker and Theo Knight

A close-up image of parts of a loomImage source, Tegen Kimbley
Image caption,

Textiles produced on the loom will be exhibited alongside work from artists Raisa Kabir, Alis Oldfield, Bharti Parmar, Dinah Prentice and Su Richardson

A close-up image of yarn being threaded through a loomImage source, Tegen Kimbley
Image caption,

Thread the Loom is the second in a series of three exhibitions including heritage crafts. Last summer Start the Press focused on printmaking and next year Ikon will explore ceramics

Get in touch

Tell us which stories we should cover in Birmingham and the Black Country

Related topics