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Florence Griswold Museum
Presents
With Needle and Brush:
Schoolgirl Embroidery From the Connecticut River Valley
May 3, 2010, Old Lyme, CT: From October 2, 2010 through
January 30, 2011 the Florence Griswold Museum in Old Lyme, Connecticut,
presents With Needle and Brush: Schoolgirl Embroidery From the
Connecticut River Valley. The Connecticut River Valley was one of the
most important centers in America for the teaching and production of
embroidered pictures by girls and young women in private academies during the
late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. As the first exhibition to
examine the subject of Connecticut River Valley needlework in depth, With
Needle and Brush contributes to the understanding of the traditions of
needlework and provides insight into the nature of women’s schooling before the
advent of widespread public education. Guest-curated by needlework experts
Carol and Stephen Huber, this exhibition of approximately sixty embroideries,
watercolor sketches, and portraits will draw extensively on works from private
collections, many never before shown publicly.
Over the course of their education,
girls undertook progressively more complex and difficult needlework. Before the
age of ten, they began with elementary samplers worked on linen and gradually
developed a repertory of stitching techniques. During their studies, they
executed canvaswork pieces, samplers, memorials, and silk pictures as evidence
of the skills and accomplishments that would demonstrate their suitability as
wives capable of managing a household and educating children. Proudly displayed
in a family’s home as an enticement to potential suitors, these pictures and
memorials affirmed a young lady's mastery of the principles of “politeness”—a
concept that encompassed knowledge of religious and literary themes as well as
an appreciation for art and music.
The exhibition illuminates the
evolution of needleworking techniques as well as tracing the distinctive styles
and subjects associated with the mistresses of various girls’ schools
throughout the Connecticut River Valley. At the academy run by Lydia Royse in
Hartford, pupils specialized in allegorical or historical subjects based on
print sources, which they replicated in gleaming silk thread. One such piece
is Jeptha’s Rash Vow (ca. 1810), which presents the Biblical
tale of a father obligated to sacrifice his only daughter to fulfill his pledge
to God that, in exchange for a military victory, he would kill the first thing
he sees upon returning home. “Needleworks like this one are truly extraordinary
in their aesthetic and intellectual sophistication, and as windows into early
American values” says Florence Griswold Museum Curator Amy Kurtz Lansing. “The
unknown girl who stitched this picture is affirming the religious tenet of
subservience to God, and doing so through a subject that was also explored
around this time in poems, prints, and even an oratorio by Handel. Through
their needlework, girls from even small towns were introduced to and
participated in wider cultural currents.” For instance, girls at the Misses
Pattens’ School, also in Hartford, worked lavish heraldic and allegorical
compositions, often accented with gold filaments. Each piece of needlework
unifies the combined talents and aspirations of the girl, her family, her
instructress, and the visual artists often called upon to paint in portrait
heads that would complete each piece.
The exhibition will be followed by a fully-illustrated book with essays and
entries by the Hubers, an essay by independent scholar Susan Schoelwer, and an
introduction by Amy Kurtz Lansing. The book will be published in 2011 in
conjunction with Wesleyan University Press.
Located on an 11-acre site in the historic village of Old
Lyme, the Florence Griswold Museum is known as the Home of American
Impressionism. In addition to the restored Florence Griswold House, where the
artists of the Lyme Art Colony lived, the Museum features a modern exhibition
gallery, education center, a new landscape center, extensive gardens, and a restored
artist’s studio. The Museum is located at 96 Lyme Street, Old Lyme, CT, exit 70
off I-95 and is open year round Tuesday through Saturday from 10am to 5pm and
Sunday 1 to 5pm. Admission is $9 for adults, $8 for seniors, $7 students, and
free to children 12 and under. For more information, visit the Museum’s web
site www.FlorenceGriswoldMuseum.org or
call 860-434-5542 x 111.
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