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Defining the Quilt

The Dizengoff Quilt was specifically designed with two major goals in mind:

  • To celebrate and honor the lives of the victims

  • To encapsulate the events of that tragic day

Marlyn decided to depart from standard quilt design and to develop a unique and deeply symbolic piece of tactile art.

Thirteen individual quilts were made. The volunteer quilters interviewed family members to gather personal information about each victim, their life, loves, hobbies, interests and ambitions (see Victims and Quilts).

Each quilt is approximately 40cm x 40 cm. They are linked to one another to depict the fact that although each person was an individual in his or her own right they were nonetheless bound together forever by this tragedy. As many of the victims died together with friends or family members, individual quilts have been hung in groupings to depict these relationships. The gaps between each quilt represent the spaces left in the lives of families and friends.

The Purim mask with its tears of blood is used to as a graphic statement about the timing of the attack.

The quilt is suspended on four sides in a free-standing light-weight aluminum frame, enabling it to be seen both front and back, as many of the quilts carry a narrative on the reverse side as well.

 

Dani
Leah
Rachel
Asaf
Inbar
Sylvia
Gail
Kobi
Tali
Hadas
Bat Chen
Dana
Yovav
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