The Latest Feature

The Latest Feature

Slow reports on art, materials, and the systems behind them.

We publish monthly or bi-monthly long-form features and research notes.

We prioritise verification, context, and material evidence over speed.
Every story is built to be cited: sources, credits, and disclosures included.

The Weight of Traces: On the Politics of Repair in Weaving and Mending
Art Art & Materials Lab Art Art & Materials Lab

The Weight of Traces: On the Politics of Repair in Weaving and Mending

Hundreds of steel scissors hang point-downward from the ceiling, their mass concentrated over a low black table. Black thread drops from the open blades, accumulating in dense, irregular clusters on the surface below. From a distance, this structure appears as a solid canopy of metal and fibre, a dark volume pressing down on the floor and dictating the room's vertical tension. At close range, the individual threads isolate, pulling taut under the gravitational drag of the iron shears, while severed ends pool unevenly on the wood, exposing the frayed tips of the cut cotton. I argue that traces of rupture and acts of connection do not occur in sequence; they are produced through one another, operating not as the erasure of damage but as the redistribution of material burdens, labour, and control.

In Beili Liu’s The Mending Project, iron scissors suspend in the air while the artist sits below, continuously cutting and stitching black fabric. The thread binds the cloth, dragging the raw edges together through repetitive needlework, while the shears overhead threaten to sever the connection at any moment. The installation engulfs the upper volume of the room, forcing a horizontal plane of sharp metal to bear down upon the site of labour, intercepting the ambient light and casting fragmented, jagged shadows across the work surface.

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Synapses in the Weft: When Smart Textiles Start Sensing the World for Us
Materials Art & Materials Lab Materials Art & Materials Lab

Synapses in the Weft: When Smart Textiles Start Sensing the World for Us

Shape-memory alloy doesn’t “animate” cloth; it gives it posture—muscle inside weave, a remembered stance. Conductive polymer fibres act less like decoration than nerves, translating touch into pulses that can be stored, compared, and interpreted.

And fibre-optic weaving turns illumination into a kind of gaze: light arriving from within, thickening when you approach, flickering as if attention had tempo. You come to look, and suddenly you’re unsure whether you’re the observer—or the measured. It All Begins Here

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