Thursday, 21 November 2024
Textile
Details
'Landmines/Campos Minados', by Linda Adams. (Photo: Martin Melaugh)
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Title of Textile: | Landmines / Campos Minados |
Maker: | Linda Adams |
Country of Origin: | England |
Year Produced: | 2015 |
Size (cm): | 43cm x 31cm |
Materials: | Recycled furnishing fabrics and clothing |
Type of Textile: | Arpillera |
Description: | Arpillerista Linda Adams created this arpillera “as a response to the fact that even after a war is over the landmines stay and continue to kill.” Antipersonnel landmines, can lie dormant for years until their detonating mechanism is accidently triggered. Designed to maim rather than kill, they cause horrific injuries resulting in amputations, long hospital stays and extensive rehabilitation. International Campaign to Ban Landmines
In this piece, Linda depicts a woman tending her crops, a routine task which has become highly dangerous as we can see from the sign: “Danger-Land Mines.” In the corner we see a child absorbed in play, bent over colourful objects, about to pick them up. These are “butterfly” mines, a type used during the Soviet occupation in Afghanistan. Exploiting the natural, playful curiosity of children in this manner is particularly disturbing for Linda, who remarks that: “children need to explore and play without risking injury and often death from a conflict which finished some time ago.”
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Owner: | Conflict Textiles collection |
Location: | Fundació Ateneu Sant Roc (Badalona) |
Original / Replica: | Original |
Photographer: | Martin Melaugh |
Provenance: | Donation from the artist. Received 2015. (HM0724) |
Textile exhibited at: |
Arpilleras Dialogantes / Arpillera Conversations, 28/05/2015 - 28/05/2015 Overcoming, Remembering: The Politics of Sewing, 8/06/2015 - 12/06/2015 Arpilleras Bordando à Resistência / Arpilleras Embroidering Resistance, 25/09/2015 - 25/10/2015 War-Torn Children, 1/03/2017 - 15/04/2017 War-Torn Children , 17/07/2017 - 28/07/2017 War-Torn Children, 8/02/2018 - 24/03/2018 War-Torn Children, 5/09/2018 - 29/11/2018 Embracing Human Rights, 5/11/2019 - 18/12/2019 Suitcases: Telling Textile Travels /Maletas: Contando Viajes Textiles, 1/10/2021 - 7/11/2021
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