Events

Mar
9
Sun
2025
Unveiling of Ceramic Sari Mural @ Alley behind Belmont Rd & Allen Place
Mar 9 @ 3:00 PM – 5:00 PM
Unveiling of Ceramic Sari Mural @ Alley behind Belmont Rd & Allen Place

Please come to the unveiling of Monica Jahan Bose’s first ceramic sari, called “Rising,” which will be installed in the Kalorama Triangle alley behind her studio. The ceramic tile mural will be mounted on the garage wall of the home of Mary Miller and Dennis Farley. We will have an unveiling celebration on March 9 from 3-5 pm in the alley behind 2015 and 2017 Belmont Rd, NW. Monica’s studio will also be open and there will be a film screening of the performances that inspired the “Rising” ceramic work.

“Rising” speaks to our connection as humans with the outdoor environment, including the water, the trees, and other species.  It is designed with ceramic tiles using the same techniques and design concepts as the Storytelling with Saris saris.  As in the fabric saris, the border tiles feature woodblock patterns. The tiles were rolled out by hand out of reclaimed clay.  Monica pressed her sari woodblocks into the wet clay to create impressions. These border tiles were then handpainted using wax resist technique.  The middle tiles of the sari comprise a figurative painting that Monica painted by hand using glazes.

Monica worked with ceramic artist and fabricator Elle Brande of Moonlight Studios in Beltsville, Maryland to create the work over the course of several months.   Monica and Elle were colleagues at Red Dirt Studio many years ago and Elle assisted Monica in some of her very first performances with saris.  We are thrilled to share this brand new work with the community. It serves as a small-scale prototype for future projects.

May
16
Fri
2025
Weaving Resistance World Pride Events
May 16 @ 5:30 AM – Jun 8 @ 6:30 AM
Weaving Resistance World Pride Events

Storytelling with Saris is thrilled to announce our participation in World Pride DC 2025 and our receipt of a World Pride grant from the Capital Pride Alliance.

. Link to press release from Capital Pride and World Pride DC 2025.

Weaving Resistance: Storytelling with Saris

In this moment of human rights crisis created by the current U.S. administration, it is imperative to build community and fight back for LGBTQ+ rights without apology or retreat. This year’s World Pride theme is The Fabric of Freedom. Textiles have served as modes of resistance for centuries, especially by women and other marginalized groups. Since 2012, the Storytelling with Saris collaborative art project has been using the cotton sari — a 19-foot-long unstitched garment— as a site of community expression of bodily autonomy and gender and climate justice. Cotton saris are covered in woodblock printing, stencils, painting, drawing, embroidery, appliqué, and poetry and then used for large scale installations and performances.

Over the last decade, Storytelling with Saris workshops, performances, and installations have engaged thousands of people in 13 U.S. states and 8 countries, including Bangladesh, Canada, France, Greece, and Italy. Recent Storytelling with Saris projects, performances, workshops, and roundtables in the U.S. and Bangladesh have specifically focused on LGBTQ+ issues, gender roles and identity, bodily autonomy, and increasing understanding and acceptance of gender-nonconforming persons through discussion, education, and collaborative art and performance.

For World Pride 2025, Storytelling with Saris will present five healing and empowering art and poetry workshops on gender/sexuality/identity to foster greater inclusion, empathy, and pride in this difficult political climate. The workshops will culminate in a community performance and march. We are partnering with Human Rights Campaign, Moms Clean Air Force, and Asian Pacific Islander Domestic Violence Resource Group.  ASL is available for all events.  All events in accessible spaces. Please contact storytellingwithsaris@gmail.com for any accommodation requests.

Weaving Resistance: Storytelling with Saris Events

Register for all events at this link on EVENTBRITE.

1. Workshop hosted by Moms Clean Air Force, 555 12th Street NW, May 16 from 5:30 to 7 pm. ASL confirmed.

2. Display of artwork Prokash/Reveal Sari Scroll on gender/sexuality/identity at World Pride Welcome Center, 737 7th Street NW (Gallery Place Metro). Washington, DC 20021, from May 17-June 8, Open Saturday, May 17th & Sunday, May 18th
12:00 PM – 8:00 PM; Saturday, May 24th & Sunday, May 25th 12:00 PM – 8:00 PM;  May 30th – June 8th, open daily from 
12:00 PM – 8:00 PM

Link to World Pride Welcome and Visual Arts Center

3. Workshop hosted by Asian Pacific Islander Domestic Violence Resource Group, May 29 from 6:00 to 7:30 pm; ASL requested.

Link to register

4. Drop in workshops at World Pride DC HQ hosted by Human Rights Campaign, 737 7th St NW, May 31, 12:00pm to 3:00pm and June 1 from 12:00pm to 2:00pm. Drop in and contribute to the World Pride saris with art and poetry.  ASL requested.

Link to register for workshop on May 31

Link to register for workshop on June 1

5. Drop in workshop at the Human Rights Conference at JW Marriott, 1331 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, June 5 from 10 am to 2 pm

Link to register for the Conference

6. Outdoor “Weaving Resistance” community sewing performance, Marie Reed Plaza, 2201 18th St NW, June 6 from 6 pm to 7:30 pm

Link to Register for the June 6 Performance

7. Culminating event: international march with massive “Weaving Resistance” sari from Lincoln Memorial to the Capitol on Sunday June 8, from 10 am to 12 noon. Meet at Foggy Bottom Metro between 9:30 am & 10 am. Step off at 10 am to go to Lincoln Memorial.

Link to register to carry sari to the Capitol on June 8

The project is sponsored by Capital Pride Alliance.  Community partners:  Human Rights Campaign, Moms Clean Air Force, and Asian/Pacific Islander Domestic Violence Resource Project.   The project is also supported in part by the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities.
Aug
28
Thu
2025
Works on Water Triennial @ LMCC Gallery
Aug 28 @ 5:00 PM – Oct 26 @ 6:00 PM
Works on Water Triennial @ LMCC Gallery

Join me on Governors Island for the Works on Water Triennial.

Opening Reception: Thursday, August 28, 5-9 pm (Remarks at 7pm)

Exhibition dates: August 28-October 26, 2025

Open Fridays from 2-5:30 pm; Saturdays and Sundays from noon to 5:30 pm | Additional hours by appointment
LMCC’s The Arts Center at Governors Island, Upper & Lower Galleries, 110 Andes Rd, New York, NY 10004
August 28* – October 26
Opening Night: Thursday, August 28, 5-9pm (Remarks at 7pm).   It’s right when you get off the Governors Island ferry from Manhattan (seven minute ride from South Ferry and $5 fare).

Artists roundtable on September 27 at 4-5 pm with Monica Jahan Bose and Dana Harper and the WoW team.

Ride the ferry from South Ferry to Governors Island with Monica Jahan Bose on September 28 at 2 pm and join her for a walkthrough tour of her installation.

LMCC’s The Arts Center at Governors Island will serve as the hub and central exhibition space for The Works on Water 2025 Triennial, a multi-site exhibition and series of public art interventions made on, in, and with bodies of water, created in response to the global climate crisis. The exhibition, curated by Emily Blumenfeld and Kendal Henry with the Works on Water team, frames the growing genre of Water Art as a defining environmental art form of the 21st century, exploring themes of access, exploitation, conservation, remediation, and care.  I’m excited to feature the “Darchira River” performance video installation in the exhibition; cinematography: Shefali Akter Shetu; music and sound design: Sonia Herrero.  I will be at the opening on Thursday, August 28, from 5-9 pm.
Works on Water 2025 Triennial artists: Nora Almeida / iki nakagawa, Frank Bloem, Monica Jahan Bose, Donald Hài Phú Daedalus, Jeremy Dennis, Sherese Francis, Jana Harper, Perrin Ireland, Art Jones, Marie Lorenz, sTo Len, Stacy Levy, Mare Liberum, Mary Mattingly, Wes Modes, Lize Mogel, Eve Mosher, Nancy Nowacek, Jean Shin, Sarah Cameron Sunde, Sunk Shore (Carolyn Hall and Clarinda Mac Low), Elizabeth Velazquez, and Marina Zurkow.