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Textile Exhibit at the Gwinnett Environmental and Heritage Center

June 15 – August 30, 2015, Open 9 am to 4 pm Monday through Saturday and 1 pm to 5 pm on the last Sunday of the month

2020 Clean Water Dr, Buford, GA 30519
770-904-3500
https://gwinnettehc.org/continuous-threads-200-years-of-georgia-textiles/

SUMMARY:  Continuous Threads features over 70 contemporary fiber art works and historic textiles, highlighting the significance of textiles and fiber to Georgia's past and present.  Join us to explore and compare old and new, practical and ornate, and historic traditions and contemporary concepts.  The exhibit was developed by the Southeast Fiber Arts Alliance in partnership with the Environmental & Heritage Center Foundation.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION:  Manipulating yarn to make fabric is a distinctly human characteristic.   The practice is nearly 30,000 years old and links cultures from around the world.  From Asia to Africa to Europe to the Americas, textiles help show how cultures identified and adorned themselves as well as how they lived their daily lives.

Discover the importance of textiles to Georgia and the Southeast and learn how fiber touches all aspects of our lives with the opening of the Environmental and Heritage Center’s (EHC) newest exhibition entitled Continuous Threads:  200 Years of Georgia Textiles.  With more than 70 works of contemporary fiber art and historic textiles, the exhibit highlights the significance of textiles and fiber to Georgia’s past and present.  The exhibition is a partnership between EHG and the Southeast Fiber Arts Alliance (SEFAA).


 “Textiles have had a profound impact on Georgia.  From the earliest days of its colonial creation, Georgia’s leaders developed a plan for economic vitality through the production of silk.  While that effort proved unsuccessful, the invention of the cotton gin in Georgia in the 1790s paved the way for cotton’s profitability and dominance of the state well into the 20th Century,” said Jack Leg.

From shirts to dresses to bedspreads and bloomers, Georgia’s early textiles were everyday objects with practical uses.  Practical textiles continue to play a significant role in Georgia’s modern commerce as the state is one of the top three cotton producing states and a world leader in carpet production.   While textile manufacturing has a leading impact on Georgia’s economy, it is important to recognize that a vibrant art movement has evolved from the region’s fiber roots.


There is a continuum between craft and art and an individual work can fall anywhere on that continuum. At the craft end of the spectrum are utilitarian objects which are often exquisitely executed and beautiful:  At the art end of the spectrum are works that use materials and techniques to express ideas and start a dialogue with the viewer.  “You’ll see both in this amazing exhibition, and you’ll gain a better understanding of the importance of textiles – to protect, comfort, serve, decorate, and challenge” says Suzi Gough, SEFAA’s President.


Continuous Threads explores the comparison between old and new, practical and ornate, and historic traditions and contemporary concepts.  The exhibit is on display at the EHC from June 15, 2015, until August 30, 2015, and is included in the price of admission.  The exhibit is made possible by a number of artists, historic organizations and educational institutions, including Berry College, Brenau University.