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The Mending Lounge
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​​BOOKHOU
​TARA BURSEY

GRANT HEAPS
MERCY
HAZEL MEYER
DORIE MILLERSON
JANET MORTON
SAGE PAUL
PHILIP SPARKS 
For a weekend in May 2016, local artists and designers gathered to explore mending through experimentation and signature styles. This pop-up public event took place at the storefront gallery of Craft Ontario on Toronto's busy Queen Street West. It took a participatory approach with a DJ and round tables welcoming visitors to bring their own mending, or observe and learn through creative know-how and homegrown flare. 

The Mending Lounge was curated by Kathryn Walter and Janna Heimstra, who selected the participating artists to reflect a range of ways to mend through art, design, poetry and politics, and inspire a celebratory spirit that would resonate with their audience as they revelled in the act of making the old new again.


PRESS


​One Minute Videos with participants
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The Mending Lounge
Introduction​

Bookhou
Comfort in Mending

Mercy
Out of sight, out of mind

Janet Morton
The Idea of mending

Kathryn Walter
Why Mending?

Tara Bursey
Mending as a hopeful process

Hazel Meyer
Muscle Panic

Sage Paul
My Pocahontas

Janna Hiemstra 
Craft Ontario Partner

Grant Heaps
​The Professional Mender

Dorie Millerson
Mending with holes

Philip Sparks
I live and breath sewing

Mending was once a part of everyday life before an era of unfettered economic growth forced the textile industry offshore and ushered in a new age of fast fashion. As the price of apparel goes down, the abuse of labour and environmental degradation increases in a globalized capital countdown. The tragic irony is that while mending is fading from public consciousness in Canada and United States, many people overseas and out of site spend their days in deplorable conditions, sewing cheap, new clothing for the North American market.

Mend more, buy less!
Picture


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