Iconic UK AIDS Memorial Quilts to go on Display at St

 

The UK AIDS Memorial Quilt will be on display to the public at community venues across London, to commemorate the lives of those lost to the AIDS epidemic 

 

George House Trust is proud to be part of the coalition of charities that have worked to display this irreplaceable piece of international social history.

 

Hundreds of individuals made quilt panels in memory of loved ones who had died from AIDS in the 1980s and 1990s, inspired by a global project that started in America.

 

The UK quilt panels will be on display on the AIDS Quilt Trail which takes place across London on the weekend of 3 and 4 December, where people can see the quilts for free at a range of community venues.

 

George House Trust, Terrence Higgins Trust, Positive East, The Food Chain, Positively UK and Sahir House, with support from Elton John AIDS Foundation and Gilead, hope the exhibitions will help remember those lost, raise awareness of HIV to younger generations and help find a permanent home for the UK quilt to ensure its preservation.

 

The Quilts, on display to coincide with World AIDS Day, reminds us how far the UK has come in the fight against HIV.  
HIV no longer stops those living with the virus leading long and healthy lives - but there is still much to be done to tackle stigma, stop transmission and diagnose the 1 in 6 who are unaware they have the virus.  
Iconic artist, Grayson Perry, who is supporting the AIDS quilt project added:  

 

“Collectively, the quilts are part of the largest piece of community art in the world – which shows just how important they are to our social history, and how special this event is. Thousands of people died from AIDS here in the UK at the start of the epidemic, and displaying this quilt coming up to World AIDS Day is a way to remember them and to reflect on how far we have come since the 1980s in the fight against HIV, thanks to incredible medical advances.  I’m delighted to support the fantastic work the coalition of charities is doing to preserve this intensely moving piece of art and encourage everyone to witness this important moment in history.

 

To get involved on social media using the hashtag #AIDSQuiltUK Jay Rayner, restaurant critic, writer and broadcaster, said: 

 

“The Aids epidemic and the appalling number of lives taken by it was all too often portrayed in the media as being about a faceless mass of unknown people. In truth, of course, it was an all too large patchwork of individual stories; of real people with names and lives, with loved ones and families and careers and talents never quite allowed to reach fruition. How better to represent that than through the Aids quilt, which gives individuality back to so many people who risked becoming mere statistics?  It is both work of art and a vital social document, and I wholeheartedly give my support to the coalition of charities and its ceaseless work to make sure the quilt finds the home it so richly deserves.”

 

Stephanie Mallas, Joint CEO of George House Trust says “We are delighted to have been involved in the history of these socially important artefacts which are a moving testament to the many people who died during the height of the HIV epidemic in the UK.  It was such a privilege to have been able to look after the quilts for so many years at George House Trust, and now to see them displayed and shared with the wider public is wonderful.  We hope that people who see them will reflect not only on the lives lost to HIV but also on the fact that for many people today HIV stigma is still all too prevalent.”

 

The AIDS Quilt Trail takes place across London on the weekend of 3 and 4 December, where people can see the quilts for free at a range of community venues including:

•    St Pauls Cathedral, Sat and Sun  
•    All Hallows by the Tower, Byward Street, 10am - 5pm Sat and Sun 
•    Positive East, 159 Mile End Rd 
•    St John's Bethnal Green 
•    Redbridge Central Library 
•    St Anne's Soho, 55 Dean Street, 1.30-6pm Sunday Only 
•    Brand Museum, 111-117 Lancaster Road, Notting Hill, 10-6 Sat, 11-5 Sun 
•    Lumen Church, 88 Tavistock Place, Friday and Saturday 
•    Church of the Immaculate Conception, Farm Street, 26 Russell Square, from 1st Dec onwards 
•    St Giles', Cripplegate, 11am - 4pm Sat & 11am - 1pm Sun 

 

More venues to be confirmed. 

Friday, 4 November, 2016

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