Piece by Piece

Independent Project
Window Installation
In-person
Jan 23
Feb 12 2026
Free
Window installations are viewable 24 hours a day from outdoors.
Dialogue 38 Inc. 865 Dundas Street West, Toronto

‘Piece by Piece’ is a window installation featuring two textile-inspired works, Flow and Labyrinth, crafted from fragments of used paper coffee filters. Delicately patterned with various combinations of ink, indigo dye, tea, and cyanotype, they are sewn into lace-like hanging panels.

Drawing on traditional quilt patterns, hexagons in Flow, and the log cabin motif in Labyrinth, these artworks honor the history of domestic textile-making while reimagining it using repurposed waste materials. Though the filter paper mimics the softness, flow, and familiarity of cloth, it is an impractical, fragile choice. The work plays on the surprise of recognition, revealing that what first appears familiar is in fact an illusion.

At its heart, ‘Piece by Piece’ is about transformation: of material, of meaning, and of perception. Reassembling these used and discarded fragments into something new and whole shows how renewal can emerge from the overlooked. Seen together, Flow and Labyrinth create a dialogue between order and openness, structure and fragility, and beauty and sustainability.

Participants

Jennifer Coghill

Accessibility

Who should visitors contact with questions regarding accessibility?
Jennifer Coghill
Can people get to the venue using accessible transit?
Yes
"Flow", hexagonal fragments of used coffee filters, patterned with ink and dyed with indigo or tea, and sewn into a random pattern on an open thread grid, forming a quilt-like panel.
"Flow", fragments of used coffee filters patterned with ink and dyed with indigo or tea, are sewn into an open thread grid forming a quilt-like panel.
"Labyrinth", rectangular fragments of used coffee filters, patterned with cyanotype, ink and tea and sewn into a geometric pattern on an open thread grid forming a quilt-like panel.
"Labyrinth", fragments of used coffee filters patterned with cyanotype, ink and tea, and sewn into an open thread grid to form a quilt-like panel.