A colorful illustration of a woman with flowing purple hair and a polka-dotted white veil. She's adorned in a vibrant dress featuring yellow, blue, and red patterns with flower motifs.

MoMu Expo Visit: Embroidering Palestine

Discover this temporary exhibition with a MoMu guide who unveils the stories behind the exhibits!

Visitor information

  • Tickets

  • When

    From 13 December 2025 to 7 june 2026
  • Duration

    1 hour
  • Languages

    Dutch & English
  • For whom

    Adults, Young adults
  • Practical information

    • Tuesday to Sunday between 10 AM - 6 PM
    • Maximum 20 persons per guide
    • €100 per guide (including €25 administration costs)
  • Questions

    For questions about your booking, please contact booking@antwerpen.be or +32 3 339 47 00.

MoMu explores Palestinian embroidery and dress through the lenses of nature, splendour, power and change.

Embroidery, called tatreez in Arabic, is the most important cultural practice of Palestine. Historically, Palestinian fashion was defined by diversity, with every region known for distinct textiles, styles and stitchwork. More than a craft, tatreez in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was a visual language shared by women, as embroidery reflected its maker’s identity and origins.

This exhibition explores Palestinian embroidery and dress through the lenses of nature, splendour, power and change. Tatreez was a rural craft, embedded in women’s relationship to nature – from motifs inspired by Palestinian flora, to fabrics dyed with indigo grown in the Galilee. At the same time, the splendour of embroidery attested to women’s wealth and status. The wedding was a vital rite of passage, with sumptuous clothing a key element of celebrations. Golden thread, mother-of-pearl shoes, and elaborate headdresses offer a spectacular glimpse of local craftsmanship. Silver jewellery, along with certain tatreez motifs, also held talismanic significance, reflecting the power of clothing to affect and protect the body.

Today, embroidery’s power lies in its connection to Palestinian identity, as a symbol of resistance and solidarity. Since the Nakba, or catastrophe, of 1948, which refers to the mass displacement and dispossession of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, and the establishment of the state of Israel, tatreez has become a form of cultural resistance, an assertion of identity. The exhibition traces the politicisation of the craft, and the continued inspiration it provides to Palestinian fashion designers in the present.

  • A woman with black clothing and black glasses speaks to a group in a museum, pointing at a white designer interior, drawing attention to the clothing and furniture on display.
    1/4
    Jeroen Broeckx
  • A group stands in a spacious room featuring wooden walls listening to a female guide.
    2/4
    Jeroen Broeckx
  • In a museum, a woman with black clothing and black glasses addresses a group, discussing a black designer chair and designer glassware and engaging her audience with enthusiasm.
    3/4
    Jeroen Broeckx
  • A woman with a brown and beige suit speaks to three individuals, standing in front of an elegant green dress displayed on a mannequin.
    4/4
    Jeroen Broeckx

Campaign image: Jerusalem Is In the Heart, 1977, Helmi El-Touni. Edited by Dar Al-Fata Al-Arabi, Caïro. Source: Palestine Poster Project Archives