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It serves as a platform for professionals in the textile supply chain to gain insights into the latest technological advancements and new machinery and devices that can enhance textile manufacturing processes, including the production of fibers, yarns, and the processing and finishing of textile products.
Heimtextil has been taking place on the Messe Frankfurt exhibition grounds annually since 1971. [4] Before the start of Heimtextil, home textiles were part of the Frankfurt Spring Fair (now called Ambiente []) but further growth of the segment in the 1960s and 1970s led to the establishment of an own fair.
A 2018 retrospective exhibition of her work entitled Tselani/Terrain: Tapestries of D.Y. Begay, was organized by the Museum of Northern Arizona. [9] Sublime Light: Tapestry Art of DY Begay, [4] a featured exhibition at the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C., is on display September 20, 2024 – July 13, 2025. This ...
2 Exhibitions. 3 Awards. 4 Works. 5 Deaths. ... The year 2025 in art involves various significant events. ... Elisabeth Haarr, 78, Norwegian textile artist (born 1945 ...
The exhibition runs through May 10 in both galleries of the Cape Cod Art Center (3480 Main St. in Barnstable.) The Cahoon Museum of American Art is opening its doors for a free spring open house ...
Ecclesiastical garment (probably), likely Christian Armenian, New Julfa, near Isfahan, mid 1600s AD, Ottoman Turkish and Safavid silk fabrics. 2015 exhibit at the old Textile Museum. Exhibitions are designed both to present textiles as art and to place them in a cultural context, by exploring religious, social, artistic, economic and ecological ...
Goole Museum's annual Open Art Exhibition runs from Saturday 15 March to Saturday 31 May. The exhibition, which is in its 11th year, celebrates the creativity of local amateur and professional ...
1801 – Paris, France – Second Exposition (1801). After the success of the exposition of 1798 a series of expositions for French manufacturing followed (1801, 1802, 1806, 1819, 1823, 1827, 1834, 1844 and 1849) until the first properly international (or universal) exposition in France in 1855.