The Aftermath Sculpture was created by The Aftermath Learning Lab in 2021 and is now on a national tour.
The Aftermath Sculpture (2021) is a large-scale multi-media sculpture and art advocacy collaboration about the global impacts of textile pollution created by The Aftermath Learning Lab. It was designed by developmental psychologist Dr. Julia DeVoy, health researcher and artist Dielle Lundberg, fashion designer and environmental educator Matilda Lartey, internationally recognized artist Mark Cooper, STEAM education researcher Dr. Brian Smith, Make Fashion Clean (MFC Tie-Dye), and The MFI Foundation with support from the Boston College Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society. The installation consists of a modular shelving system, secondhand clothing collected from the Boston College community, protest signs that link through QR codes to the lab’s Textile Waste Facts educational resource (a crash course about global textile pollution designed to accompany the sculpture), and a project documentary. The goal: to face up to a global economy of throwaway consumption and “fast fashion” that contributes to global textile pollution, waste colonialism, environmental racism, and the climate crisis. The Aftermath team invites all who engage with the sculpture into a 5-point call to action.
The sculpture is currently on a national tour and has so far visited: Bridgewater State University, the Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society at Boston College, St. Mary’s College of Maryland, Boston University Charles River Campus, Boston University School of Public Health, The ACCelerate Festival at The Smithsonian Museum of American History, and The McMullen Museum at Boston College.