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The TRC recently received a substantial subsidy from the Overvoorde – Gordon Stichting / het Pauwhof Fonds, for setting up a series of meetings with stakeholders in The Netherlands to discuss textile and dress related subjects.

Starting in spring/summer 2026, the TRC is launching a new program of ‘round table meetings’ and networking afternoons in 2026–2027. These gatherings—five to seven meetings, with ten to fifteen participants each time—are aimed at strengthening relationships and stimulating collaboration with a broad group of stakeholders within the (inter)national textile, science, art, and heritage fields.

Textiles connect; they are a universal language that bridges the gap between science, culture, and society. With this program, the TRC aims to realize a stronger, cross-disciplinary connection between museums, art institutions, universities, and knowledge institutes, as well as fashion professionals, makers, artists, and a broader public. By actively bringing these parties together, a dynamic network is created in which knowledge sharing, encounters, and collaboration take center stage. The program builds upon the existing expertise of the TRC and focuses on deepening and renewing relationships. At the same time, the program aligns with a current development: for several years, there has been renewed and growing interest in textiles within contemporary art, design, and fashion practices. This development is visible in museums, biennials, and presentation institutions, where a new generation of makers works with themes such as sustainability, material research, reuse, botanical processes, and heritage. This trend also marks a broader shift: alongside conceptual and artistic approaches, there is renewed attention to craftsmanship, material technical knowledge, and artisanal skills. The TRC responds to this by explicitly positioning itself as a knowledge center where the combination of thinking and doing takes center stage. In doing so, space is also made for various approaches to textiles, and both the distinction and the interplay between artistic practice and craft expertise are acknowledged.

Target Group and Content
Curators (textile, art, anthropology, and archaeology), academic representatives (such as professors and deans), as well as makers, designers, artisans, artists, and representatives of art, culture, and fashion institutions are invited to the meetings. Makers are actively involved and invited to meetings and workshops, where they are introduced to the collection and the specialist knowledge of the TRC. To strengthen knowledge transfer, the TRC collaborates with universities, such as the University of Leiden, the University of Amsterdam, the Vrije Universiteit, and Manchester Metropolitan University; with art academies, such as Willem de Kooning and Rietveld Academie; and with art, design, and fashion programs such as the Design Academy; and with museums such as the Wereldmuseum Rotterdam and Museum de Lakenhal.

The meetings will consist of guided tours, collection presentations, interactive sessions, and open discussions regarding collaboration opportunities. These meetings are hosted by Gillian Vogelsang-Eastwood, founder, and Augusta de Gunzbourg,
specialist in Asian art and textiles and curator and manager of education at TRC. During the
sessions, concrete forms of collaboration are explored,
such as loans, co-exhibitions, internships, research and
education projects, guest lectures, residencies, and links with the fellowship program.
Special workshops may also be highlighted, such as the
Lefkaritika (white embroidery) workshop by a specialized Cypriot teacher or a workshop
in the summer, to be provided by a Mexican hand weaver/embroiderer, organized in
collaboration with the ToYo Foundation

The programme started with a tour of the TRC building, and was followed by a round-tabel discussion. The TRC director, Dr Gillian Vogelsang, emphasised that the TRC is a textile knowledge centre that focusses on what is a textile, from both a theoretical and practical point of view, and on the language of dress. To do so, the TRC  uses its extensive collection of textiles, clothing and accessories (some 54,000 registered pieces). The main TRC collection is based on provenance (country, group, etc). Through its focus on technique, the TRC also studies archaeological textiles. Two other points that were mentioned were the paid fellowship programme in textiles and dress (for the next three years, eleven fellows will be working at the TRC for some six months each), and the plans to lay out a textile garden,m with plants that are used to produce and/r decorate a textile.

The TRC, by mouth of Gillian Vogelsang, suggested the participants to facilitate access to each other’s collections and archives for research, but also offered the TRC's assistance in training students, interns and curators about textiles and setting up exhibitions. The TRC can also help with research, with publishing research findings (the TRC has extensive contacts with Bloomsbury Publications, London; Princeton University Press; WBooks), with cataloguing textiles and with assessing potential donations. She also suggested to help each other with national and international networks. Possible areas of co-operation that were furthermorfe stressed included a joint webpage or platform for sharing ideas and objects with respect to collections, library, partners and donations. All participants agreed that more (public) visibility was needed for textile and dress studies, research, publications, etc.

A significant problem discussed was that museum curators often do not have the time to carry out research on their museum’s collection – yes, for an exhibition some research is normal, but not for general research. Having a research/knowledge centre, such as the TRC, may help other museums with research possibilities and questions.

Another method of working together, as mentioned during the. round-table,  was in the field of exhibitions and workshops. One such exhibition is currently being organised by the Centraal Museum, Utrecht, about cotton, to be held in October 2027. The possible areas of help from the side of the TRC was the loan of historic and archaeological cotton textiles, the loan of modern naturally-coloured cottons, as well as using the TRC’s network to talk with modern fashion trade.

Another practical form of cooperation would be the linking upo of the TRC Library with that of the WereldMuseum library, so that students and researchers have easy access to both sets of books [a similar arrangement needs to be organised with Leiden University].

It was suggested that we could have a joint meeting of the group every three months to discuss in an informal manner experiences, problems, ideas, etc. Everyone thought this was a good idea and the TRC will organise and stage/house the meetings.


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Contact

Boerhaavelaan 6
2334 EN Leiden.
Tel. +31 (0)71 5134144 (office hours)  
office@trcleiden.org 

The TRC is open every day from 10.00 to 15.00

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Bank account number

NL39 INGB 0002 9823 59, in the name of the Stichting Textile Research Centre.

Donations

The TRC is dependent on project support and individual donations. All of our work is being carried out by volunteers. To support the TRC activities, we therefore welcome your financial assistance: donations can be transferred to bank account number (IBAN) NL39 INGB 000 298 2359, in the name of the Stichting Textile Research Centre. BIC code is: INGBNL2A.

 You can also, very simply, if you have an iDEAL app, use the iDEAL button and fill in the amount of support you want to donate: 
 

 

 

Since the TRC is officially recognised as a non-profit making cultural institution (ANBI), donations are tax deductible for 125% for individuals, and 150% for commercial companies. For more information, click here