UK AIDS Memorial Quilt

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The UK AIDS Memorial Quilt is an ongoing memorial project that commemorates lives affected by AIDS in the United Kingdom.[1]

The quilt was displayed in its entirety at the Turbine Hall of the Tate Modern between 12 and 16 June 2025.[2] This was the most significant display of the quilt since its 1994 display in London's Hyde Park.[3] The writer Charlie Porter had written to the Tate asking them to display the quilt.[3] In 2013 the quilt was being stored in a cupboard at the George House Trust in Manchester and was deteriorating.[4] As of 2025 it is stored at Positive East in London.[4]

The quilt consists of 42 quilts and 23 individual panels that commemorate 384 individuals.[2][3] Notable individuals depicted on the quilt include Bruce Chatwin, Ian Charleson and Denholm Elliott.[3] The 1995 documentary film There Is A Light That Never Goes Out was made about the creation of the quilt.[2]

The quilt was created after the Scottish AIDS activist Alistair Hulme saw the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt on display in San Francisco in 1989.[3][4] Hulme also met the creator of the AIDS Memorial Quilt, Cleve Jones.[4]

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