The Clothesline Project
The Clothesline Project is an American non-governmental organization created to bring awareness to the issue of violence against women. For those who have been affected by violence, it is a means of expressing their experiences by decorating a t-shirt. After the shirts have been decorated, they are hung on a clothesline display. The intention of the display is to honor survivors and act as a memorial for victims. It is also intended to aid in the healing process for those who were directly affected and those who have lost someone special to this violence. Lastly, the clothesline display is to educate society and promote awareness about the extent of violent crimes against women.
History
Artist Rachel Carey-Harper came up with the idea of hanging color-coded t-shirts on a clothesline in a public place to gain recognition of the issue after hearing that while 58,000 soldiers died in the Vietnam War, there were 51,000 women killed around the same time by men who claimed to love them. She brought the concept and design to a group of women on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, which started The Clothesline Project in 1990. This motivated the women to create a program that would speak up and reveal the issue of violence against women. Many of the women had personally experienced violence, and Carey-Harper wanted to find an unprecedented, creative way of educating others on this matter. The group thought it was naturally the thing to do, since women were known for doing laundry and exchanging information while their clothes were hanging out to dry.Each woman has the opportunity to tell her story by decorating a shirt with words and art that represented her experience. She then can hang the shirt on a clothesline for the world to view. The earliest project displayed 31 shirts in Hyannis, Massachusetts as part of the annual "Take Back the Night" March and Rally in October 1990. Since then, The Clothesline Project has received publicity in articles of various magazines and a huge national response turned the project into a worldwide campaign. there were an estimated 500 projects nationally and internationally, involving about 50,000 to 60,000 t-shirts. There were projects in 41 U.S. states and five countries. Since then, it has grown exponentially.
T-Shirt representation
The Clothesline displays shirts that exhibit a great range of abuse. Despite the fact that each individual shirt has one-of-a-kind significance, a color code is used to identify the different forms of abuse:.- White is for women who died as a result of violent acts.
- Yellow or Beige is for women who have been battered or assaulted.
- Red, pink, and orange represent women survivors of rape and sexual assault.
- Blue or green is for women survivors of incest and sexual abuse.
- Purple or lavender represents women attacked due to their sexual orientation.
- Brown or Gray is for survivors of emotional, verbal or spiritual abuse.
- Black is for women assaulted for political reasons or those disabled as a result of an attack or assaulted because of a disability.