Filum - Fiber Arts Podcast
In this episode, we explore how textiles and language share a remarkable ability to preserve memory, truth and lived experience. Inspired by Osip Mandelstam’s poem Preserve My Words Forever, we consider how words, like stitches, can endure censorship, carry witness and outlive the political systems that seek to silence them. Mandelstam’s imagery of resin, tar, labour and an iron shirt invites a textile reading, revealing poetry itself as a woven fabric of experience. From court embroideries and Soviet propaganda textiles to the Chilean arpilleras and the AIDS Memorial Quilt, we examine cloth as both an instrument of political power and a medium of testimony. Drawing on the ideas of George Orwell, Hannah Arendt, Solomon Asch and Mikhail Bakhtin, the episode reflects on the relationship between language, ideology and artistic independence, asking why artists are often tempted by the comfort of belonging. Ultimately, it asks what kind of memory we choose to weave into our work, and why words and stitches grounded in personal experience remain among the most enduring forms of truth, remembrance and creative resistance. Music: Lidérc - Aesthetic Boomopera [https://pixabay.com/music/beats-aesthetic-boomopera-podcast-lofi-lounge-intro-music-15s-seconds-149967/]
24 episodes
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