Seven Bags Full

2.10.25 – 1.11.25

Thur – Sun 11am -4pm, Birley Studios, Preston

Part of the British Textiles Biennial 2025

An exhibition of mixed media and textile works by 16 members of the Textile Study Group, responding to the biennial themes and using polyester fabric offcuts from Blackburn based Edward Taylor Textiles, who specialise in the production of sportswear.

The British Textiles Biennial is focusing this year on invention and innovation, past present and future. Artists are looking back at the textile pioneers of the 20th century; the Lancashire textile industries being inspired by a bold vision of the future that revolutionised our lives. It asks us to look at how our own material future can learn from that past which is almost lost to us.

Clothing the people that conquered the sky, the mountains and the oceans with manmade fabrics and chemical concoctions, innovators did not realise the toll they would take on the planet.

Now we must reach back to the past to rediscover nature’s own innovation and how we might harness it to begin to repair and regenerate, exploring indigenous practices that still carry that knowledge and point to new solutions to heal what we once sought to dominate.

Edward Taylor Textiles has donated off-cuts of Polyester for the group to respond to and use for this exhibition. The part of the company this comes from is their high-performance sportswear department, mostly football shirts. Most of the cloth is white and stretchy, with some colour blocks and there are different grades and weights. The sports shirts are cut economically, using a cutting machine, before they are printed using sublimation printing on heat presses.  They are then sewn after printing. So, the remnants we have are often shaped as the negative of the shirt pieces. The title of the exhibition refers to the bags of offcuts being delivered to us.

The Birley is located round the corner from the newly opened Harris Museum, and it will be possible to include a visit to our exhibition in a tour of other venues.

Making:50

Making:50

The Textile Study Group reaches a milestone anniversary

The Textile Study Group will be 50 in 2023. For half a century this group has been at the forefront of innovative making, teaching, and textile art practice. Since its inception in 1973, and originally established to support tutors of embroidery, the group has evolved and grown in stature and is now one of the UK’s most prestigious and respected groups of textile artists and tutors.

The Textile Study Group maintains a core membership of 25 experienced textile teachers, all of whom are nationally and internationally recognised for their forward-thinking and challenging approaches to art practice, contemporary teaching and making. Many members are published authors of best-selling textile, art, and design books, and many have won prizes and awards for their outstanding work in the world of textiles, as have their students.

Making:50 a landmark exhibition

We will be celebrating our anniversary year with a significant touring exhibition – Making:50 – and by publishing a limited edition bespoke book. Both will include new and exciting work from our current membership, and acknowledge those who paved the way by initiating ‘Group ‘73’, (which later evolved into the Practical Study Group, renamed the Textile Study Group in 2010).

Each new artwork in this anniversary exhibition includes an element of 50 – either obviously or obscurely – and some artists will be discussing their work in an exciting series of online lectures and Meet the Artist events.

Exhibition details

Tweeddale Museum & Gallery, Peebles (1st April – 5th August 2023).

The Ropewalk, Barton upon Humber (16th September – 26th November 2023).