the covid resilience tapestry

The Covid Resilience Tapestry is a living piece that began in the middle of the Covid-19 lockdown as a way to provide work for artists during a very uncertain time. Each small illustration was embroidered by artists, often at home or in restricted working conditions, and the individual artworks were then sewn together to form the larger tapestry. Produced over a period of almost two years, the work is a testament to life and work during the Covid-19 pandemic.

In a symbolic and beautiful language linked to the land, the environment and Xhosa cosmology, the piece reflects changing emotional seasons over the course of the pandemic. The four seasons span the tapestry, from left to right, with a sacred fig tree at the centre of the work. Symbolic birds are positioned throughout the tapestry, as well as haikus by writer and close friend of Keiskamma Art Project, Marguerite Poland. Even events like the July 2021 looting in KwaZulu-Natal, which led to heightened anxiety nation-wide, find their way into the tapestry.

At its start, two prophetic figures, Ramaphosa on television, and Nongqawuse from memory, ask the nation to respond to a crisis in a way that preserves the welfare of the people, presented through the health of the cattle. Moving through the tapestry, the symbolic birds, short poems, cattle and changing colours communicate the emotions felt by the isiXhosa-speaking community of Hamburg during this difficult time. In showing how Covid changed people’s lives, the piece also conveys the community’s extraordinary resilience.

Keiskamma Artist Words
The Covid Resilience Tapestry

2021

Appliqué, embroidery and fabric

2.5 m high x 7.5 m wide

Judith Neilson Foundation, Australia

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