By Artichoke Trust
Produced by Artichoke and commissioned by 14-18 NOW: WW1 Centenary Art Commissions. PROCESSIONS' generous supporters thanked at the end of the story.
Aerial view of London's PROCESSIONS (June 10th, 2018)Artichoke Trust
PROCESSIONS
PROCESSIONS was a mass participation public artwork that took place on 10 June 2018 in all four UK capitals, to celebrate 100 years of votes for women. 100 artists were commissioned to make 100 centenary banners, working with community organisations across the UK.
An Lanntair (2018-04) by Chris Hammacott and members of the Western Isles Women’s group and Barbara Ziehm, Alaina Schmisseur, Angela Price, Alison Fox, Caroline Brick, Hazel Mansfield, Anne Edwards, Mary Ann Russell, Betty Matheson, Angela Styles, Marie Macaskill, Gill Thompson, Murial Ann Macleod, Susanne Erbida, Christine Phillips, Catherine macarthur, Kate Mawby, Elizabeth Whyte, and April WhyteArtichoke Trust
An Lanntair
Artist: Chris Hammacott
Contributors: The Western Isles Women’s Group with An Lanntair
Location: Stornoway
Materials: mixed textiles, Harris tweed
An Lanntair
This banner represents the diverse range of women who came together to create it. On a backdrop of Harris Tweed, each participant created squares representing women who have inspired them. In the centre of the banner is depicted the Goddess Brid, from whom the Hebrides take their name. She represents the strong women who live and work there.
An Lanntair
Over the blocks climb small women figures, helping one another upwards, using the work of inspirational women to help them onwards. The text, ‘No Woman is an Island’, is written in English and the group’s native Gaelic.
An Talla Solais (2018-03/2018-05) by Lizzie McDougall and Am Bhata The SistershipArtichoke Trust
An Talla Solais
Artist: Lizzie McDougall
Contributors: Am Bhata The Sistership at An Talla Solais
Location: Ullapool
Materials: mixed textiles
An Talla Solais
Am Bhata The Sistership set out to illustrate aspects of living in the Scottish Highlands for women. Inspired, nurtured and challenged by their environment (both natural and social), the group feel themselves to be on a journey that will not be over until all women have equality. This journey is driven by a will to make a better world for all children, everywhere.
An Talla Solais
The participants contributed their ideas, time, energy, materials, stories, empathy, multi-tasking skills and sistership. They also contribute massively to the life of the Highlands and beyond, and artist, Lizzie McDougall, felt very grateful and honoured to have worked with them.
Arts in Merkinch (2018-02/2018-06) by Heidi Soos and Blazing Needles and all of Highland Multicultural Friends Sewing GroupArtichoke Trust
Arts in Merkinch
Artist: Heidi Soos
Contributors: members of Blazing Needles and all of Highland Multicultural Friends Sewing Group
Location: Inverness
Materials: mixed textiles
Arts in Merkinch
The group found this to be a wonderfully collaborative project, both in the design and the making. The members felt that it was important to ensure that their geographical location, as well as their diversity of race, ability and experience, were clear within the banner.
Arts in Merkinch
The use of a variety of sewing, knitting, crocheting and crafting mediums ensured that every member of the team could contribute their own special skills, whilst also learning each other's practice. Some elements (such as the flowers) could be worked on by individuals at home when they felt able. Accessibility of participation was the most important part of the process for the group.
Comar (2018-05/2018-06) by Alicia Hendrick and Local schools, Guiding Association and women's group (SWRI)Artichoke Trust
Comar
Artist: Alicia Hendrick
Contributors: Mull and Iona woman and girls
Location: Isle of Mull
Materials: beeswax, dye, applique, embroidery, net
Comar
Lead artist, Alicia Hendrick states: “Our banner is a celebration of the inspirational women of our islands. It takes the shape of a sail held aloft by oars and incorporates handmade fishing net made under the instruction of a former salmon fisher woman.
Comar
At its centre, a bold map of Mull has been filled with images of inspirational women from our islands. Using local beeswax, brushes and tjanting tools we inscribed the names of island women we admired from past and present in the sea surrounding the map of our islands.
Influenced by the Suffragette banner maker, Mary Lowndes, we have incorporated the very fabric of our islands, with tweed made by Ardalanish Weavers Tweed appliquéd onto the map of Iona, and The Sound of Iona Tartan appliquéd to create a compass.
We have embroidered lyrics, words and poetry from island women writers onto the bearings of this compass. Our sash carries as our motto the words We Know Where We're Going * in local wool to signal our intent as we travel forward together as women through the 21st Century.
Comar was the host organisation for this project. Established in 2013 through the merger of An Tobar and Mull Theatre, it strives to build on the legacy of these two well-regarded companies."
*This slogan is taken from the title of the famous Powell and Pressburger film “I Know Where I'm Going” filmed on Mull in the 1940s.
Eastgate Theatre & Arts Centre (2018-03) by Deborah Campbell and Local community groups, including: Guiding Association, Women’s Institute and Peebles High School art studentsArtichoke Trust
Eastgate Theatre
Artist: Deborah Campbell
Contributors: local community groups, including the Guiding Association, Women’s Institute and Peebles High School art students, with Eastgate Theatre
Location: Peebles
Materials: mixed textiles, buttons, beads
Eastgate Theatre
The bicycle for the Suffragette movement became the method by which women had access to independent travel without chaperones. This gave women the freedom to come together in the liberation of women’s rights and the bicycle therefore become a symbol of the emancipation.
Tweeddale is a haven for cycling and many women and girls are actively involved in the sport, so the bicycle was an obvious source of inspiration when creating the banner.
Eastgate Theatre
Participants each independently created a hand-embroidered leaf, which incorporates either their name, a word appropriate to the Suffragette movement, or to today’s continuing struggle for equal rights.
Edinburgh College of Art (Edinburgh University) (2018-02/2018-05) by Lnndy Richardson and University of Edinburgh students, staff and women of Corntonvale PrisonArtichoke Trust
Edinburgh College of Art (Edinburgh University)
Artist: Lindy Richardson
Contributors: University of Edinburgh students, staff and women of Corntonvale Prison, with Edinburgh College of Art
Location: Edinburgh
Material: mixed textiles, net, beads
Edinburgh College of Art (Edinburgh University)
The banner brings together a series of badges as responsive slogans from the group’s discussions around suffrage and the disenfranchised. Each badge was made individually by group members, some in university, some at home and some in cells in Corntonvale Prison.
Edinburgh College of Art (Edinburgh University)
Each participant has a badge of equal size and space on the banner, every voice and statement being equal in this united artwork. The banner celebrates influential women past, present and future who have inspired, and continue to inspire women seeking equality and change.
Edinburgh College of Art (Edinburgh University)
At PROCESSIONS on 10th June, the group also carried pennants emblazoned with the names of ‘The Edinburgh Seven’, the UK’s first female university students matriculated at Edinburgh University and admitted from 1869. They had a very difficult experience negotiating their way into education and endured terrible prejudice. They were pelted with eggs and flour when entering the examination hall, and there was even a sheep let loose in the exams to disrupt proceedings.
Edinburgh College of Art (Edinburgh University)
The Seven took their case to the House of Lords, asking that they be allowed to vote as university graduates. Their case was thrown out.
Mixed textiles, net, beads
Glasgow Women’s Library (2018-03/2018-06) by Helen de Main and Glasgow Women's Library workshop attendees (names listed on banner): Helen, Foxy, Daniela, Beverly, Freya, Mac, Kathryn, Freya, Betty, Anita, Ruby, Karen, Ashley, Annabel, Joanne, Alison, Lisa, Sandy, Jean, Paria, Emma, Shazia, Bridie, Karen, Aleena, Alice, Rumana, Zeenat, Mhurai, Ebony, Amalia, and RachaelArtichoke Trust
Glasgow Women's Library
Artist: Helen de Main
Contributors: Glasgow Women's Library workshop attendees: Helen, Foxy, Daniela, Beverly, Freya, Mac, Kathryn, Freya, Betty, Anita, Ruby, Karen, Ashley, Annabel, Joanne, Alison, Lisa, Sandy, Jean, Paria, Emma, Shazia, Bridie, Karen, Aleena, Alice, Rumana, Zeenat, Mhurai, Ebony, Amalia, Rachael
Location: Glasgow
Materials: screenprint on fabric
Glasgow Women's Library
The backdrop of this screen-printed banner is made up of repeating close-up images of women’s hands. The graphic shape that surrounds the central image was inspired by the group’s research into different flag and banner shapes.
Glasgow Women's Library
The texts were drawn from conversations around what it means to be a woman in 2018, as well as from research from material in the Glasgow Women's Library's archive and museum collection, notably the banner and badge collection. Individuals worked on texts for the smaller sections, as the group was keen to present a variety of women’s voices. The group then printed these together.
Look Again Festival (2018-05) by Natalie Kerr and Granite Guardian GalsArtichoke Trust
Look Again Festival
Artist: Natalie Kerr
Contributors: Granite Guardian Gals with Look Again Festival
Location: Aberdeen
Materials: mixed textiles
Look Again Festival
This banner was inspired by a wonderful letter from the collections of Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museums. Addressed to pioneering journalist and Aberdeen Suffragette Caroline Phillips, it details arrangements for a march in 1907 similar to PROCESSIONS, bringing women* together from across Scotland to demonstrate for the vote.
*those who identify as women or non-binary
Look Again Festival
The group states:
‘We have explored what it means to be your own true self in society today. We hope to: take up space, support each other, find strength in defiance and power in our friendships.’
Luminate (2018-04/2018-06) by Fiona Hermse and Dunbar Dementia Carers Support Group: Lorna, Dorothy, Ricky, Ray, Carol, Anou, Izzy, Alison, Iris, Anne P, Anne S, Louise, Nora, Beth, RitaArtichoke Trust
Luminate
Artist: Fiona Hermse
Contributors: Dunbar Dementia Carers Support Group: Lorna, Dorothy, Ricky, Ray, Carol, Anou, Izzy, Alison, Iris, Anne P, Anne S, Louise, Nora, Beth, Rita. With Luminate
Location: Edinburgh
Materials: cotton, digitally printed satin, dyes, silk paints, fishing net, lace
Luminate
The banner focuses on the fish wives and herring girls, an important aspect of Dunbar’s heritage. These incredibly hard-working women led extraordinary lives, many of them very emancipated for their time. In 1913, a group of Newhaven fish wives travelled 400 miles to join a deputation of working women led by Suffragette, Flora Drummond, at the House of Commons.
Luminate
The banner incorporates the first part of a quote by Frances Wright, 19th century Scottish abolitionist and feminist: 'Equality is the soul of liberty; there is, in fact, no liberty without it.'
The banner was created using spray dye, silk painting, mono printing, embroidery and pompom techniques.
Luminate (2018-04/2018-06) by Fiona Hermse and Dunbar Dementia Carers Support Group: Lorna, Dorothy, Ricky, Ray, Carol, Anou, Izzy, Alison, Iris, Anne P, Anne S, Louise, Nora, Beth, RitaArtichoke Trust
Luminate
Reverse
Macrobert Arts Centre: Ethel Moorhead Banner (2018-05) by Nadine Gorency and Macrobert PROCESSIONS groupArtichoke Trust
Macrobert Arts Centre: 'Ethel Moorhead Banner'
Artist: Nadine Gorency
Contributor: Macrobert PROCESSIONS group
Location: Stirling
Materials: mixed textiles
Macrobert Arts Centre
This banner was inspired by and is dedicated to Ethel Moorhead, one of the lesser known but most militant and pro-active Suffragettes of her era. Ethel was found with bloody hands and arrested after she smashed a glass case at the Wallace Monument in Stirling. The group was keen to create a banner that paid homage to her strength, determination and commitment to militancy.
Macrobert Arts Centre
The group used upcycling methods, with one of the participants donating her silk wedding dress to create Ethel’s dress. It transpired that the PROCESSIONS march on 10th June was the same date as the participant’s wedding anniversary.
Macrobert Arts Centre Forth Valley by Nadine GorencyArtichoke Trust
Macrobert Arts Centre: 'Forth Valley Banner'
Artist: Nadine Gorency
Contributor: Macrobert PROCESSIONS group
Location: Stirling
Materials: mixed textiles
Macrobert Arts Centre - "Forth Valley Banner"
The banner was inspired by the landscape, the vibrant history of the Macrobert area and the exquisite and intricate textile craft used in Suffragettes’ banners.
Stirling is known to be the gateway from the Lowlands to the Highlands, and purple heather covered Campsie Fells, along with lush, green rolling hills, fitted perfectly with the Suffragettes' iconic colour scheme.
Macrobert Arts Centre - "Forth Valley Banner"
A string of Suffragettes is also seen marching on these hills towards the Wallace Monument, evocative of Ethel Moorhead’s defiant actions. Applying upcycling methods, fabric off-cuts were used to emulate beautiful landscapes and fused plastic bags became the meandering River Forth.
National Theatre of Scotland (2018-05) by Ana Ines Jabares Pita and National Theatre of ScotlandArtichoke Trust
National Theatre of Scotland
Artist: Ana Ines Jabares-Pita
Contributors: Ms, Miss, Mrs with National Theatre of Scotland
Location: Glasgow
Materials: felt, cotton
National Theatre of Scotland
This banner represents laundry! Doing the washing! Traditional women’s work!
It is made up of a variety of clothing – women’s, men’s and children’s, representing the whole household.
The group was inspired by the film, ‘Suffragette’, which they watched together. They laughed, cried and shouted at the screen together, and learned that women passed messages to each other through the laundry service to arrange meetings, rallies, share news and recruit.
National Theatre of Scotland
The group wants equality in 2018. Equal rights for all women, equal pay, equal recognition and representation. It has been 100 years and the message of the banner is that women are still doing more than our share of the washing!
Patiece Art Projects (2018-04/2018-05) by Alexandria Patience and North Coast WomenArtichoke Trust
A Patienceart Project
Artist: Alexandria Patience
Contributors: North Coast women
Location: Portskerra
Materials: mixed textiles, fabric paint, diamante, copper wire, shells, glass beads, PVA glue
A Patienceart Project
Artist Alexandria Patience structured this banner to represent the most northerly area of the mainland of Scotland. She reached out to rural and remote locations to ensure as many women in the North as possible would feel a part of this celebration of women’s Suffrage, by sharing in the making of a single banner.
Each one of the 15 letters, ‘North Coast Women’, was made by an individual, family or group to represent themselves and their communities spanning the North Coast. They represent Caithness and Sutherland.
A Patienceart Project
See the map on the banner to locate the makers’ locations, and the group’s home.
Perth Theatre Horsecross Arts (2018-05) by Pester & Rossi and Women of PerthArtichoke Trust
Perth Theatre / Horsecross Arts
Artists: Pester and Rossi
Contributors: Perth Theatre volunteers
Location: Perth
Materials: mixed textiles
PERTH THEATRE / Horsecross Arts Ltd
This banner was inspired by an original suffrage banner created by Perth Suffrage Society, which included the 'double headed eagle' image from the Perth City crest.
The wings of the bird have become a collage of fabric hands creating the background, with two women sitting at the top, and a large brain in the middle representing strong female minds.
The banner uses the traditional Suffragette colours: green, representing hope and the emblem of spring, white for purity in private and public life, and violet representing the instinct of freedom and dignity. The group collated words and phrases that united the hopes and concerns they share as women and girls today.
Project Ability (2018-05) by Sandi Kiehlmann and The group who made the banner together with support staff all attend Project Ability’s studio for people with mental ill health and learning disabilities.Artichoke Trust
Project Ability
Artist: Sandi Kiehlmann
Contributors: the group who made the banner together with support staff all attend Project Ability’s studio for people with mental ill health and learning disabilities.
Location: Glasgow
Materials: mixed textiles
Project Ability
Project Ability has a strong visual identity and the group decided to employ this as the main design feature. The visual is a graphic representation of the singer, Madonna. Project Ability represents community and creativity, friendship and wellbeing. These themes were at the forefront of the design.
The group decided to use felt as it is easy to manipulate and would provide solid colour.
The women taking part represent a broad community of interests; they wanted to demonstrate unity and advocacy for creative expression.
Shetland Arts Development Agency (2018-03/2018-05) by Christina Inkster and With the women of ShetlandArtichoke Trust
Shetland Arts Development Agency
Artist: Christina Inkster
Contributors: the women of Shetland with Shetland Arts Development Agency
Location: Shetland
Materials: mixed textiles and appliqué
Shetland Arts Development Agency
A poetic statement from the group:
We are the women of Shetland. This is our banner.
Our banner is our community; our community of women; each our own, together we stand, loud and proud, hand in hand.
Hear us roar, from the shore,
prejudice? A total bore!
We are here, furthermore,
Equity, we adore!
Let us join in great galore,
May valour be forevermore.
Taigh Chearsabhagh Trust (2018-05) by Deidre Nelson, assisted by Kirsty O’Connor and Group members Anna Black, Rosie Blake, Margaret Cowie, Stephanie Cumming, Margaret Fenton, Mary Harman, Barbara Hunter, Marnie Keltie, Cathie Laing, Vanessa Langley, Natasha Natarajan, Deirdre Nelson, Kirsty MacLeod, Mary McCormick, Anne MacKenzie, Anne Monk, Mairi Morrison, Kirsty O’Connor, Margaret Paterson, Anne Rabbitts, Gail Spears, Kirsty Walker, Amanda Woods, Amanda Wyvill, and Cally YeatmanArtichoke Trust
Taigh Chearsabhagh Trust
Artist: Deirdre Nelson, assisted by Kirsty O’Connor
Contributors: Taigh Chearsabhagh Trust
Location: North Uist
Materials: Cotton, Harris tweed, silk
Taigh Chearsabhagh Trust
The banner, ‘Spiorad Boireannaich Uibhist An-dè, An-diugh ’s A-màireach’ ('Spirit of Uist Women Past, Present and Future') celebrates the strong spirit of the women of Uist, rooted in Gaelic culture and the beautiful islands themselves. Inspired by the Suffragette’s handkerchief from Holloway prison, signatures of ordinary yet extraordinary Uist women were gathered and embroidered onto the banner.
Names will be added, including notable women of the past, to attached streamers as an ongoing process. Hand stitching together connected participants with their forebears and forged new friendships in the present. The group’s hope is that young women will continue to be inspired in creating the Uist community of the future.
Tannahill Centre by Mandy MacKintoshArtichoke Trust
The Tannahill Centre
Artist: Mandy McIntosh and The Feegie Needlers
Contributors: The Feegie Needlers and SWIFT (Strong Women In Ferguslie Together), a closed group for younger women in Ferguslie, many with very young children. With The Tannahill Centre
Location: Paisley
Materials: mixed textiles
Tannahill Centre
The Feegie Wummin banner pictures women meeting at The Tannahill Centre in the act of discussing the history of women's suffrage including issues of class. The work was made during weeks of dialogue and stitching using painting quilting embroidery and appliqué on canvas.
Tannahill Centre
Artist Mandy Macintosh said:
‘The banner survived a house fire, phoenix like, and was partly remade after the procession. [The group were] among some of the strongest and most resourceful women I have ever encountered; consider the consciousness raised and it’s only going to go higher. "Here comes Josie, here comes Claire, we've cast oor vote fur 90 years.”’
Scottish Refugee Council (2018-04/2018-05) by Paria Goodarzi and Helen de MainArtichoke Trust
Scottish Refugee Council
Artist: Paria Goodarzi and Helen de Main
Contributors: women from the refugee community in Glasgow. With Scottish Refugee Council
Location: Glasgow
Materials: mixed textiles
Scottish Refugee Council
This banner was designed and embroidered by women from the refugee community in Glasgow, along with artists, Paria Goodarzi and Helen de Main. The banner features fabric from the women’s home countries, including Zambia, Zimbabwe, Kurdistan, Pakistan and Iran. Most women with refugee status in the UK are still excluded from voting in Westminster elections.
PROCESSIONS was produced by Artichoke and commissioned by 14-18 NOW: WW1 Centenary Art Commissions, with support from the National Lottery Heritage Fund, Arts Council England and the Department for DigitalCulture Media and Sport. Based on an original idea by Darrell Vydelingum.
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