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).

 

NSW Exhibition

05
Sep
2026

"Preservation" 2026 NSW Exhibition

Sat 5th Sep 2026 - Thu 17th Sep 2026
"Preservation" 2026 NSW Exhibition

“Preservation” Exhibition 5-17 September 2026

Presented by ATASDA NSW in conjunction with Primrose Paper Arts and NSW Calligraphers

Come along and see the stunning works produced by the members of ATASDA. 

Works for sale, etc.........

All welcome!

Latest News

All ATASDA members are invited to participate

Garden Gallery, Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney

5-17 September 2026

For more information and entry form go to www.atasda.au/nsw/exhibitions

in conjunction with Aust. Soc. of Calligraphers and Primrose Paper Arts

Would like to enter but not a member? - Join Us

Read more

Our branches in all states welcome new members. Join online and come along to attend social days and workshops, learn new techniques, meet other artists and enjoy being part of a vibrant organisation.

Join Us

Read more