“Preservation”is a quietly powerful theme — it can hold tenderness and urgency at the same time. Here are some ways it might be understood, especially in an exhibition context:
From Chat GBT… thanks to Laziza Hawkins (Victorian member)
1. Holding on
Preservation as care and keeping:
- Memories, stories, family histories
- Traditions, skills, languages, rituals
- Objects that carry emotional weight (worn, mended, reused)
This leans into love, attention, and the desire not to lose what matters.
2. Repair & mending
Preservation through intervention:
- Repairing what is damaged rather than replacing it
- Visible mending, stitching, patching, reinforcing
- Honouring wear, age, and fragility
This frames preservation as an active process — not freezing things in time, but sustaining them.
3. Environmental & ecological care
Preservation as responsibility
- Landscapes, waterways, species, habitats
- The tension between human use and protection
- Climate grief, stewardship, guardianship
This can be political, grief-laden, or quietly devotional.
4. The body & self
Preservation of identity and wellbeing:
- Mental health, resilience, survival
- Aging bodies, illness, recovery
- Cultural identity, selfhood, dignity
Here, preservation becomes deeply human and intimate.
5. What’s at risk of being lost
Preservation implies threat:
- What is disappearing, silenced, erased, forgotten
- Whose histories get preserved — and whose don’t
- Archives, collections, and who controls them
This invites critique of power, institutions, and choice.
6. Time & impermanence
Preservation in tension with decay:
- Efforts to slow time versus accepting impermanence
- Materials that fade, rot, rust, fray
- The futility and beauty of trying to keep things
This can feel poetic, melancholic, even spiritual.
A useful curatorial question for you…
You might ask artists - what are you trying to keep alive?
Preservation can be loving, obsessive, political, fragile, hopeful — or all of these at once.
This can be shaped into:
- a short curatorial statement,
- artist prompts, or
- examples specifically for textiles / fibre / material-based work (which feels very on-brand for you).