The Quilt, or the
Australian AIDS Memorial Quilt Project to give it its full name,
was founded in 1988. Inspired by an American model, it allows people
who have lost loved ones, family or friends to design and produce a
memorial panel in fabric.
Each panel is unique, commemorating the individuality of the deceased
whith words and images which evoke particular interests or habits. Names
and poems and slogans and brief life histories; photographs and Christmas
trees and rainbow flags and theatre tickets all mark aspects of the
lives of those who have died of an AIDS -related illness.
The purposes of
the Quilt are many : to commemorate the dead, to assist in grieving,
to encourage support for those living with HIV. But there are clear
political aims too: to bring a human quality to the statistics of loss
and to promote a compassionate dialogue, to challenge discriminatory
views, to encourage preventative behavious.
The Quilt is both a personal document and a public one. Its Unfolding
- an elaborate and highly ritualised process- and its display in a myriad
of locations and situations brings its messages to thousands of people,
many of whom have no direct experience of loss. Its very existence is
a remarkable tribute to the political nature of AIDS. Deaths in war
and industrial accidents have been commemorated but what other disease
has elicited such a project? And the Quilt is sustained by volunteer
labour in all states and territories.
text supplied by the Gay and Lesbian Archives
view
the quilt panels