#needleworkmonday | 2 Year Anniversary - Sampler
It is two years since the #needleworkmonday tag came into being, bringing together needlework artists and crafters every Monday to share their creations, inspirations and challenges. A little contest has been running through July to celebrate and this is my entry.
I was at a loss about what to do until last Wednesday when I remembered my interest in samplers. I found Stitchpoint and created a simple banner.
I chose Oxford font because it reminded me of the beautiful Italic script we learned at primary school and I liked the Ecclesiastical look, like stone-carved monuments in churches. It's taken about three days' work so far, I would guess, to make. I was working quite slowly, listening to the radio and enjoying the sensation of stitching. Many thoughts ran through my head, about #needleworkmonday, the many friends I have made here, and the stillness and slow rhythm of making each stitch and letter.
In their earliest form, samplers were put together as personal reference works for embroiderers: trials of patterns and stitches which had been copied from others, records of particular effects achieved which could be recreated again. They would have been the work, not of children, but of more experienced embroiderers, and some, from their quality, of professionals. V&A
Source Linen sampler embroidered with silk, by unknown maker, Germany, 1500-1550. The V&A Museum, in London, has built up a collection of over 700 examples, ranging in date from the 14th or 15th century to the early 20th, reflecting the contribution made by samplers towards documenting the history of embroidery, its teaching and practice.
In later centuries, samplers became more formulaic as they became part of a girl's education and, to me, less interesting. I did have a look through the V&A's collection to see if they had any contemporary samplers or whether there was any reference about how samplers have influenced contemporary artists, but there didn't seem to be any.
I was reminded of several artists as I was stitching. Cezanne, with his monumental Bathers, the canvas bare in some places, highlighting the contrast between ground and paint or, in my case, canvas and stitch.
Source I've always loved this painting since I first saw it in an exhibition in London in 1996. You can see the bare patches of canvas on some of the figures. I was fascinated by that and the way I feel greedy when I look at the painting, as if I can't take it all in.
Source Man on a Plain, Erich Heckel, 1917. This is a print from a woodcut. It is in the Leicester collection of German Expressionism - quite a unique collection - and I have been to see it many times. It had a profound effect on me, the technique, the starkness created by the engraving and the subject matter (the oppressiveness and strain of the 1914-1918 war) when I first saw it, and it has stayed in my memory, the harshness created by the contrast between ink and ground.
Source TR III, Anni Albers, 1969-1970. This is an embossed print, with the way the light falls on the planes of the paper creating the contrast. In spite of my raging when I went to see this exhibition earlier this year, Anni Albers work has become part of my creative memory and language, that I call to when I'm trying to understand my own experiments.
My simple design is so far from these and yet, creating it encompassed so many other thoughts and feelings and experiences. I am not sure what I am going to do with it. One idea was to use it as the cover for a sheath for my dressmaking shears. That way, it would be in use every day and I would always be reminded of #needleworkmonday and its place in my life and development. It was posting each week in #needleworkmonday, focusing my ideas, that made me realise how important making (regardless of the outcome, its acceptability to others) was to me and how I wanted to spend my time in constant experiment with ideas. If any of them became a finished piece of work, that was another matter.
I like the idea of samplers as a personal commemoration, a gift designed entirely for the occasion, from one person to another, celebrating the rites of life: weddings and new babies and lives lived. Whenever I hear Forever Young, I'm reminded of my mother ... "May God bless and keep you always May all your wishes come true May you always do for others And let others do for you May you build a ladder to the stars And climb on every rung May you stay May you stay forever young." She was an atheist, but the sentiment holds. That would some sampler, commemorating her life.
Bob Dylan: Forever Young. Thanks to @crosheille for initiating #needleworkmonday and to @crystalize, @marblely and @muscara for their support for the community.
Wow 2 years, congrts to the long running #needleworkmonday tag, Anni Albers and her embossed print is done in such a way one could stare at it in thinking there may have been cryptic message left behind.
What do you think the message would say?
When looking at your art examples, I guess you really have to visit me sometimes as I live so near to the Folkwang Museum (my father even studied at the Folkwang university of Fine arts) which possesses many artworks of the German Expressionism. The Museum has around 600 artworks which date mostly between 1800-1930. And the museum is one of the first in Germany to open its permanent exhibition for free. Which seems to be much more common in the UK (and what I love).
Shamefully I have to admit I never new there were such old examples of stitch sampler (and this one even made in Germany - ahhhhh - shaaaaame)… My knowledge about Fiber art is really meagre and therefore your posts are perfect for me, to learn a bit more in this field.
Your contest entry is great. As always with embroidery I am in awe. I am so impatient with hand-stitching that I can only admire this technique, but do not understand how anybody manages to finish such an artwork without becoming a mass murder (I hope you did not commit a crime in the last days!!?? 🙏😂)
I am so glad that this community exist and you have a big share on this: Thank youuuu 💕🥳
I love the collection at Leicester, there is a story behind it, I believe it was the collection of a couple who fled Germany in the 1930s - we have quite a big Jewish community in Leicester. I will have to go and look it up, I have several books about it, and there have been several special exhibitions. I love the transition between the earlier, more formal, figurative art and the move to more abstract art, but also, as with this woodcut, the references to much earlier 14th-15th century works. I'd love to come and see the Folkwang Museum, it sounds fabulous, perhaps I should investigate an Autumn break :)
I think with embroidery you have to become very zen! It takes a while to slow down, but I am sure it is good for us, like meditation. I was amused that sometimes my hands got very sticky and I would have to get up and wash them: my over riding memory of needlework at school (which I hated) was sticky hands.
I'm with you on the community and you, too :)
Oh sigh, the 1930s.... So much suffering, violence and destruction. It is good to know some people managed to flee and to take artworks with them. The folkwang museum suffered also under the Nazi regimen, most of their modern art collection was deemed „Entartete Kunst“, they lost 1400 artworks (not that I want to compare the death of humans with losing artworks... 😱 The latter only being sad but not tragic)
And with the embroidery: Perhaps you should initiate an embroidery meditation course - this could be a huge success (I would come) ❤️🌈☺️
Great idea for a sampler and entry! Thanks for such an interesting post about history and art too!
Thank you :) I have been that picture you posted of the Lake: the colours are intoxicating, I think I might have to do some experimenting. I was in London today, I should have done a colour print on the works photocopier!
Let me know if you end up printing it! It was such a pretty day and the sun was just right.
Here is another from the same spot but without the cool stump.
Blimey, that is beautiful, too! I might even see if I can get some straightforward digital prints, I'd love to have this large scale somewhere I can sit and gaze at it while I'm drinking a cup of tea.
Glad you like it! I'm using a similar image from a trip to the Oregon coast as my phone background. So calming!
The Albers print reminds me of the Sierpinski triangle
Yes, I can see that. Interesting.
Awwww how adorable this is!!!! I love that you added our motto to it! The Oxford font is fabulous!!! Very nice job on this @shanibeer! I look forward to seeing your final decision on how to use it.
I love how you always give us a little history behind things. It was interesting reading about the beginning linen samplers!
It’s refreshing to hear how #NeedleWorkMonday has inspired you! ❤️
Thanks for participating in the contest!
I like the motto 😍
I've been meaning to get into these - my niece is getting married next month and, again, needleworkmonday has inspired me to get going!
Hope is well with you and your family and you are enjoying the summer 😍💕❤️
That’s great to hear! 😃
We have really enjoyed this Summer!!
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I love the Oxford font too!! Your design is pretty and I love the motto in there. I didn’t know about samplers. Thank you for the info and also for the stitchpoint link :)
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Thank you 😊 The stitchpoint website is really good - I can see you will have a good time there 😍
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Ah... the winning entry :D
Congratulations once again :)
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