City walls turned into loud reminders that stitched fabric can shove gender inequality into the spotlight without throwing a punch.
International Women’s Day 2026 gathering
International Women’s Day 2026 gathering
- Goodluck Jane is hosting women on March 8, 2026.
- Color for Change centers on public art and equity talk.
- Her event leans on dialogue, art-making, and straight-up advocacy.
- Goodluck Jane works across fabric, paper, drawing, and paint.
- Jane blends cut textiles with collage for layered visuals.
- Her pieces dig into identity, heritage, and womanhood themes.
- Textured surfaces in her art double as social commentary.
- Goodluck Jane kicked off Color for Change on March 8, 2024.
- The campaign used giant textile murals in city spaces.
- Ankara fabric scraps formed portraits of women leaders.
- Each installation pushed back against gender-based inequality.
- Goodluck Jane, built the project around open community forums.
- Survivors and local women shared lived stories in discussions.
- Conversations steered the look and feel of every mural.
- Participants cut and placed fabric, shaping collective authorship.
- Goodluck Jane’s murals became standout landmarks in their areas.
- Schools arranged visits that sparked talks on gender respect.
- Young girls faced towering portraits stitched from patterned cloth.
- Layered textiles signaled strength and ancestral continuity.
- Goodluck Jane, teamed up with legal advocacy groups.
- Organizations ran info sessions during mural reveal events.
- Resources and protection guidance reached attendees directly.
- Art on those walls doubled as both inspiration and intervention.