Ydah BESTER

My work explores memory and the quiet language of women’s work, honouring the knowledge, both technical and emotional, that has been passed down through generations, knowledge that is often overlooked, yet enduring in its care and resilience.

 I’m inspired by the craft technique, textiles, garments, and gestures passed from hand to hand across generations, and translate their delicacy into metal. In doing so, I am drawn to the intricacies of these processes and the patience and precision they demand: the repetition of stitches, the fine tensions of weaving the patterns of lace. Repetition becomes a meditation and detail becomes devotion. Rather than mirror textiles literally, I allow their presence to emerge as subtle echoes, textures pressed into silver, forms that suggest weaving or lace, whispers of the familiar that surface slowly with time.

These objects become both transformation and preservation, turning threads into metal, moments into heirlooms. They carry stories of love, resilience, and inheritance, ensuring the voices of women who came before me remain alive.