Mixed media artist Goodluck Jane will mark International Women’s Day on March 8, 2026 by hosting women through her Color for Change public art and gender equity project. The initiative will use large scale textile murals, dialogue and community participation to spotlight women’s experiences and challenge gender based inequality.
Goodluck Jane is known for her layered visual style that blends cut fabric, paper collage, drawing and painting. Her works explore identity, heritage, womanhood and the human form, turning texture and colour into powerful stories and tools for social change.
She first launched the Color for Change campaign on March 8, 2024 as a bold public art movement. Using Ankara fabric fragments stitched into portraits of women leaders, she created murals in urban spaces that confronted silence and celebrated resilience.
The project was designed as a participatory movement rather than a solo exhibition. Open forums allowed women and survivors of inequality to share their experiences, which then shaped the visual direction of each artwork. Community members helped cut and arrange fabric pieces so that every mural carried a collective voice.
Over time, the murals became cultural landmarks in their neighbourhoods. Schools organised visits that sparked conversations about representation, respect and women’s leadership, while young girls saw larger than life images of women rendered in layered textiles as symbols of strength and continuity.
Color for Change also linked art with practical advocacy. Through partnerships with legal advocacy groups, mural unveilings included information sessions that connected creative expression with access to support, rights awareness and protection.
As Goodluck Jane prepares for the 2026 edition, the project continues to expand its reach and message. She aims to show that public art can confront injustice in a peaceful but powerful way, turning city walls into lasting declarations of equality and dignity.
Through each stitch, fabric fragment and portrait, she reinforces the idea that art is not only seen but lived and shared. Color for Change invites communities to stand together for gender equity while honouring the resilience of women everywhere.