Time Out, Tune In: View your body as an archival site: which intergenerational stories are nested there?
On Saturday the 25th of April, Nyata Collective will host a Batik workshop where we will look into textiles as an archive, a silent witness of daily life. What intergenerational knowledge is embedded in our bodies, held by what we wear? How can we bring invisible voices to life?
During the workshop you will translate your stories into shapes and transfer them onto fabric, creating Batik prints that will slowly appear by dying. While waiting for the results we will make embroideries and slow stitches; transmissions of knowledge in textiles. What do you want to archive for the future? What has been passed down from generations?
We hope to create an exchange among all participants and, in doing so, bring together a collection of stories. After the workshop, you can bring your dyed clothing piece home with you and keep the thoughts and stories from the workshop alive by creating new memories each time you wear it.
Everyone is welcome to join! The workshop is free. Please sign up at lenn@plaatsmaken.nl so we can prepare accordingly. Bring a piece of white or light colored cotton clothing that you wish to dye. We will send you details on how to easily pre-treat it at home for the workshop.
About the program
This activity is part of the Time Out / Tune In program that Lenn Cox has curated around Plaatsmaken's shared household. Time Out / Tune In connects the cyclical nature of time and its seasons, with a call to slow down! The program explores with multiple generations how we can organize together, what we can learn from each other and what is at stake in the cultural field and beyond. Dancing through chosen families, kindred spirits and ancestral matters. Read more about the program Time Out / Tune In.
About the artists
Nyata Collective consists of Asha Victoria and Amber Zara van den Pangaard, Arnhem and Rotterdam-based multi-disciplinary artists, exploring ways to address social topics through collaborative and hands-on textile processes. Nyata is an Indonesian word for ‘real’ or ‘tangible’ based on facts. With their practice they aim to broaden this definition into a term for merging the invisible and visible into a tangible experience. As a collective, they dive into different modes of harvesting knowledge by making space for what has been archived in the body: heritage, memories, dreams, daily experiences. They believe that through human and non-human encounters, we can gather personal stories, turning them into interwoven threads of knowledge and skills to move towards a dynamic and circular system centered on community building and reciprocity.