This net curtain entitled ‘Marking time’ is pierced with pins and needles in the traditional tally pattern for counting and suggests a prisoner marking time; counting the days until their release. The use of a net curtain for such a method of counting seems unusual and even uncanny, in the Freudian sense, when the boundary between the homely and the unhomely becomes blurred. This boundary, the liminal space between home and not-home, is represented here by the net curtain.
The use of
pins and needles for marking time suggests that the time keeper is using the only
tools at her disposal, her needlework equipment, to record the passing of the days.
This misuse of feminine sewing equipment suggests a subversion of the domestic and
reflects the duality of home as sanctuary and prison. But like many uncanny
experiences it leaves us with more questions than answers. Why is she not
sewing quietly and contentedly? What is troubling her? Is she held against her
will? Is she a victim of domestic abuse? What is she afraid of? Why does she have
no voice? Is she still even enclosed in the curtained room or have we stumbled
upon a scene from a fairy tale?
No comments:
Post a Comment