DATES_
Open Source Embroidery Exhibition_
Date 16th May
Tags craft, open source, HTTP Gallery, London, international, event
This exhibition explores the connections
between the collaborative characteristics of needlework, craft and Open
Source software. This project has brought together embroiderers,
patch-workers, knitters, artists and computer programmers, to share
their practice and make new work.
Html
Patchwork in progress
The centre-piece of the exhibition at HTTP
Gallery is the HTML Patchwork developed in response to the popularity of
quilting in Sheffield, the result of a participatory project initiated
by Ele Carpenter in partnership with Access Space. The patchwork is
built on open principles of collective production and skill-share where
each person contributes a part to the whole. The final work is a
collectively stitched patchwork quilt of HTML web-safe colours with
embroidered codes, and a wiki website, where the makers of each patch
identify themselves and write about their sewing process. Each patch is
personalised by the sewer, often including embroidered web
addresses.

telinit Ø: time for bed, Lisa Wallbank, 2007
Knitted Blog
(detail), Suzanne Hardy, 2006-
In an interview with Jess Lacetti, Ele Carpenter said about the project:
"The same arguments about Open Source vs Free Software can be applied to
embroidery. The needlework crafts also have to negotiate the principles
of 'freedom' to create, modify and distribute, within the cultural and
economic constraints of capitalism. The Open Source Embroidery project
simply attempts to provide a social and practical way of discussing the
issues and trying out the practice. Free Software, Open Source, amateur
and professional embroiderers and programmers are welcome to contribute
to the project."

Hexart GDlib Script Error, digital print on canvas, James Wallbank,
2007
Weaving network cable in progress, Paul Grimmer, 2007
The project was developed by Ele Carpenter when working as an artist in
residence at Access Space in Sheffield and Isis Arts in Newcastle upon
Tyne. Access Space is an open access media lab using recycled computers
and open source software. Anyone can drop in and use the lab to develop
their creative projects.
The exhibition at HTTP Gallery in
Harringay, North London, includes works by 11 artists and makers
alongside the collectively made HTML Patchwork quilt and wiki. Other
works in the exhibition include Susanne Hardy’s Knit-a-Blog, a
collective knitting project made by contributors from across the UK and
USA, Iain Clarke’s PHP Embroidery, which explores the open source PHP
programming language as a form of self-generating weaving, as well as
artworks by Paul Grimmer, Tricia Grindrod, Jake Harries & Keith
o’Faoláin, John Keenan, Trevor Pitt, Clare Ruddock, James Wallbank, and
Lisa Wallbank.
The HTML Patchwork has been created by people
at: Access Space, Art through Textiles, The Patchwork Garden, The Fat
Quarters, Stocksbridge Knit n Chat, Totley Quilters, Isis Arts, and the
Banff New Media Institute at the Banff Centre for the Arts, Alberta,
Canada.
Websites

