The second
series of practice in my ‘Domestic veil’ exhibition, looking at the theme of
women trapped in the home in mid-nineteenth-century gothic novels, uses the
idea that the trapped heroine’s only means of communication is through her
needlework skills. So rather than just marking her imprisonment by tallying the
days using her pins and needles, as she did in the ‘sanctuary and prison’ section,
she is now actively communicating to the outside world using the net curtain as
her canvas. However she is using coded communication to disguise her messages.
She uses bobbin lace in the net curtain pictured above to embed the words ‘help
me’ within her lace.
I also
produced a ‘virtual’ sampler using the Illustrator computer program rather than
actual stitching to highlight the heroine’s plight. The full text of the
sampler reads ‘I sew a long seam and my pins and needles help me for sometimes
the thread escapes me’ but the layers of text fade in and out to reveal the
hidden phrases ‘help me’ and ‘I long for escape’ reflecting the concealed
thoughts of the seamstress.
In other
pieces, such as 'I warned you' shown above, I have used interactive cross stitched QR codes to hide hidden messages.
These can be read by the app on a smartphone to reveal their hidden words and
suggest that all is not harmonious in the domestic environment veiled by the
net curtain. So far the net curtain has been used as a surface for coded
communication of the inhabitants of the home but in the next chapter ‘Silent
witness’ it starts recording what it hears in the home.
2 comments:
what a hard life - oppressed/suppressed ... and aware of it...
Yes, I think many of the Victorian women this research is based on felt that way.
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