Library of Congress launches digitized collection of National AIDS Memorial Quilt records
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, December 18, 2024


Library of Congress launches digitized collection of National AIDS Memorial Quilt records
A selection from more than 200,000 items from the AIDS Memorial Quilt Archive are displayed prior to a ceremony announcing the Library as the new home of the collection



WASHINGTON, DC.- The Library of Congress has released a groundbreaking online collection of the National AIDS Memorial Quilt Records, making one of the most poignant symbols of the AIDS epidemic in the United States available to a global audience. As the largest communal art project in the world, the AIDS Memorial Quilt honors the lives of all Americans who have died of AIDS since 1981, when the disease was first identified.

Released to coincide with World AIDS Day commemorations, the newly digitized collection offers a unique window into the deeply personal stories behind the 55-ton quilt and its panels. The digitized collection, totaling more than 125,000 items, includes letters, diaries, photographs and other materials documenting the lives of those represented in the Quilt.

The digitized archive is now reunited online with the communal folk art of the quilt panels. Together, these digitized collections will be a boon for researchers, families of AIDS victims, policymakers, and more. While the Quilt is housed at the National AIDS Memorial in San Francisco, its voluminous records have been entrusted to the American Folklife Center at the Library since 2019.

“The digitized AIDS Memorial Quilt Records collection is a major milestone not only in our preservation efforts but also in ensuring that the stories, lives, and collective memory of those lost to the AIDS epidemic remain accessible to future generations around the world,” said Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden. “In the digital age, we have the responsibility and privilege to safeguard this history so that, through every pixel, it can continue to educate, heal, and inspire people for generations to come.”

The AIDS Memorial Quilt, first created by a group of community volunteers in San Francisco in 1987, has not only been a testament to the lives lost to AIDS but also a powerful tool for advocacy and a stark reminder of the impact of the epidemic on a local, national and global scale.

"The National AIDS Memorial is so appreciative of this historic partnership with the Library of Congress and the American Folklife Center for stewarding the AIDS Memorial Quilt collection forward and completing its digitization,” said John B. Cunningham, chief executive officer of the National AIDS Memorial. “Through this project, the power of the collection will now be available to all through the digital platform and can now be reunited with the Quilt panels to which they were originally connected. This collection keeps the stories of the lives cut short alive and allows society to learn from them."

LGBTQ activist Cleve Jones created the Quilt’s first panel in honor of his friend Marvin Feldman, a 33-year-old actor who died of AIDS in 1986.

“There’s a promise in a quilt. It’s not a shroud or a tombstone,” Jones said, reflecting on the Quilt's significance. “I don’t want to stop remembering Marvin Feldman and all the other friends of mine who have gone.”

Similarly, Judy Soons, a mother who lost two of her six children, Sydney and Jim, to AIDS, crafted a shared panel to commemorate the closeness of her sons. Soons channeled her grief into supporting others, drawing strength from the community formed through the Quilt.

The late Sylvester James, a gay, African American disco star, became a symbol of the fight for LGBTQ equality. Known for his bold and unapologetic embrace of his identity, James rose to international fame with his anthem “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)” serving as a soundtrack for sexual and gender liberation movements. His life and legacy continue to inspire generations, celebrating resilience, self-expression, and joy in the face of adversity.

Currently, more than 1.2 million people are living with HIV in the U.S. and there are around 31,800 new infections each year, KFF data show. While care and treatment can make HIV a manageable chronic condition, about 8,000 people die with HIV-related illness as a contributing cause of death each year, according to the CDC.

Digitization of the archive was made possible by the generous support of the Ford Foundation, which provided core funding for the Library’s “For the People: Fund for Powering Knowledge,” designed to connect Americans with important social movements and showcase how they shape the fabric of American life and government.

The AIDS Memorial Quilt Records, totaling over 200,000 items, offer an intimate look at the victims’ lives through such artifacts as photos, manuscript letters, diaries, greeting cards, notebooks, tributes, obituaries, epitaphs, pamphlets, fabric swatches, original artwork and so much more. More than half the collection has now been digitized, allowing the general public to engage with and reflect on this important piece of history.










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