Tag Archives: embroidery

Lots Going on at Chemung County Historical Society Museum

Chemung County Historical Society in Elmira has several very interesting exhibits up just now.

*What took us there last week was an EMBROIDERY EXHIBIT, “When Needle, Thread, and Fabric Meet”… all contemporary work, not historical pieces.

*These are dozens of creations from members of the Chemung Valley Chapter, Embroiderers Guild of America. Some works LOOK like historic pieces… many serious needleworkers are very interested in antique designs and techniques, and “samplers” – some of them copies of historic pieces – give them a chance to dig in with multiple approaches in one composition.

*But other works are clearly modern pieces, sometimes with caution thrown to the wind.

*In one picture piece, butterflies stand out three-dimensionally from the fabric. In several others, every square millimeter of the surface is stitched. In others, the design stands alone, stark and self-confident in a sea of fabric.

*Cross-stitch, stumpwork, needlepoint, and bargello are among the techniques on exhibit. If you don’t like butterflies, you might like tigers. Anything goes.

*Another special exhibit was on CARTOONS BY EUGENE ZIMMERMAN (“Zim”), a Swiss immigrant who lived in Horseheads, and was nationally enjoyed for decades on either side of the turn of the century.

*This was especially interesting to me, as I’m a cartooning fan who worked hard at documenting Zim’s books in the Grand Comics Database (www.comics.org). This exhibit includes a review of Zim’s life and career; samples of his work; print blocks of his cartoons, with demonstrations on how they were used; his drawing board and other tools.

*Particularly moving was the original, the very cartoon he had already sketched out in pencil, and was inking literally on the day he died, mocking Depression-era radio radicals Huey Long, Hugh Johnson, and Father Coughlin. It was the last work ever from his hand, after a long and well-loved career.

*Believe it or not, time was when the N.A.A.C.P. was considered a radical, even subversive organization. This made the exhibit on the CENTENNIAL OF ELMIRA’S N.A.A.C.P. CHAPTER all the more interesting. The national organization was barely a decade old when local residents asked for help with “fair housing” issues – owners refusing to sell or rent to African Americans.

*After that issue was addressed the chapter went into abeyance until revived during the Great Depression and World War II, when there were numerous employment issues to be dealt with. Elmira chapter members also engaged in historic national actions, such as Freedom Rides and the several Marches on Washington. And the work continues as the struggle continues.

*Another exhibit focuses on the CENTENNIAL OF ELMIRA’S KIWANIS CLUB, which for many years was in the top ten worldwide for membership. Kiwanis have supported local parks, and athletics, and the Arctic League, and much, much more.

*The Museum has an ongoing program of focused exhibits on Chemung County municipalities in turn. Just now the spotlight’s on BALDWIN, the rural town east of Elmira.

*In the Brick Barn Gallery is a large exhibit, GETTING AROUND: TRANSPORTATION IN CHEMUNG COUNTY. I found this to be a great deal of fun. I enjoyed seeing trolley paraphernalia, including a horrifying safety booklet, “The Little Girl Who Didn’t Think.” More entertaining were the annual early-1900s bicycle tags, receipts for which supported sidepaths… dedicated bike tracks that ran alongside the execrable highways.

*Canals, early autos (with all their marvelous retail accessories), and horse-drawn vehicles… including a sparkling phaeton with the fringe on top… all come into the story, along with buses, the Chemung County Airport (now Elmira-Corning Regional) and Schweizer sailplanes.

*Of course the permanent galleries, A HISTORY OF CHEMUNG COUNTY and MARK TWAIN’S ELMIRA, are always open, and always a pleasure. The Zim, embroidery, Kiwanias, and N.A.A.C.P. exhibits are through September, so if you want to see them you need to hop to it. Baldwin is up until January, and “Getting Around” until May. The museum’s open Monday through Saturday, 10 to 5. Adult admission is $5, with seniors, students, children and members either discounted or free, depending on category. We don’t even live in Chemung, but we usually go at least once a year. Really, it’s worth the visit.

Treasures in Silk and Fabric at Curtiss Museum

Sad to say, Curtiss Museum is not offering its traditional holiday miniatures show this year. But on Friday the 18th, the museum did open another perennial favorite, the biennial embroidery show. Some of the pieces are over a hundred years old, and others were finished, I imagine, under the lowering pressure of the Friday deadline.

*A crazy quilt (c. 1900) on loan from Schuyler County Historical Society belies the commonplace idea of crazy quilts as patchwork folk-art primitives. Certainly odd patches are pieced together, but artistic embroidery adorns the work. This is, in fact a work of art on a different level than the usual crazy quilt.

*And it spotlights the definition of embroidery as work with an eyed needle, embellishing a fabric surface. The three 1905 pieces by Clara and Olivia Schumacher use silk thread, worked onto linen with a flat satin stitch. It took a lot of labor and a lot of patience to work the baskets in these works, capturing the weaving of slats, with alternating warp and woof slats oriented differently. I didn’t touch, (of course!) but I didn’t need to to. I could “feel” the texture of the silk, and I could “feel” the texture of the baskets.

*A brightly-colored bird approaches one basket from the upper corner, with marvelous clear space between. Sometimes successful embellishment includes recognizing when NOT to embellish.

*Now having waxed on about these historic pieces, I confess that I’m usually pretty ho-hum about historic samplers and the like. But my eye was seized by the REPRODUCTION Mary Starker 1760 sampler (embroidered by Pat Bennett), and by the REPRODUCTION Dorothy Walpole 1774 sampler (embroidered by Patty Kahl).

*What I loved about these is the fact that they’re so vivid. Now I get a sense of what it might have been like, in the 1700s, to see their just-finished originals, in all their vivid unfaded glory. The colors pop out; so do the birds, the deer, the vases, the tree. Even the “white space” seems to leap from the surface.

*The deer and the rabbit connect, in my mind, with a deer, a rabbit, a squirrel and a peacock on Barbara Heytmeijer’s counted-thread piece, Sanctuary. The layout reminds me of one of those boxwood hedge gardens in England, with each creature in its own quadrant and a space in the center.

*Speaking of England, Joyce House’s counted cross-stitch English village, overflowing with flowers, is also overflowing with colors. It took first prize at the New York State Fair. Mary Clarkson’s crewel piece, Country Cottage 1967, holds forth in paler colors. I couldn’t tell whether this was worked in 1967, or whether it was supposed to represent 1967, but it surely has a ’67 feel.

*And in keeping with the season there are also numerous Christmas pieces. Joyce House’s cross-stitch Snow Family Christmas whimsically shows a snow father and snow mother out pulling their little snow boy on a sled, with a little snow dog along for the adventure. Kristine Garner’s Home for Christmas (in beads and cross-stitch) pictures a closed but welcoming front door, surrounded by lights and next to a Christmas tree. It’s the door we all can’t wait to open… in memory if not today, in the mind if not in reality.

Many Histories, One Community: Chemung County Historical Sociey

Our county historical societies are regional treasures, and Chemung County Historical Society even has a treasure vault.
Bank vault, anyhow. The Society’s home (and its Chemung Valley History Museum) are in the 1834 Chemung Canal Bank on Water Street in Elmira, where the vault is a showplace for an ever-refreshing exhibit of new acquisitions.
Just this month the main gallery reopened following a redesign and re-creation. Now there are two major exhibits in that space, beginning with “In the Valley of the Big Horn: A History of Chemung County.” Chemung derives from a Native expression naming the place where the horn was found – the “big horn” being a mammoth tusk… and a huge 11,000 year-old tusk, with its elegant curve, anchors the gallery.
The exhibit starts with Native life and its cruel disintegration during Sullivan’s invasion, and of course also includes Elmira’s time as a Civil War depot and prison camp. Visually striking are a HUGE canal lock key, a board from the old plank road down to the state line, and a model of Webb’s grist mill in Southport. A brick marked HH came from Horseheads Brick Company – and was used to build a building at Elmira College.
Even the 1950s are now history, as shown by the Airline console TV from Montgomery-Ward. That was fun, but I really enjoyed seeing the far older Trolley Card Game and the Telegraph Boy Game.
The other major exhibit here is “Mark Twain’s Elmira,” which besides showing the novelist himself also shows community life during that Gilded Age (to use a term that Mark Twain coined).
The Brick Barn Galley has a special exhibit, “’Til Death Do Us Part: Wedding and Funeral Customs in Chemung County.” This is a great visit for anybody who wants to think about the county’s past, but also about what it’s like today and what it will be like in future days.
Wedding clothes from the Victorian age and even earlier are joined by a small notebook in which Reverend Joseph Riggs recorded the weddings he performed as a traveling minister in the Twin Tiers, back before the Civil War. There were no official records back then, so notes like this might be the only way to know who was married to whom (and where, and when, and how much they paid for the ceremony).
A chuppa on loan from Congregation Kol Ami made me think of an acquaintance of mine who married her fiancee in a rail yard in Poland as they were being taken to concentration camps. She said, though, that it wasn’t a real wedding, as they didn’t have a canopy. She never saw him again, nor any of her family, nor any of his.
Muslim and Hindu weddings are being conducted in Chemung these days, and both are represented here. The Hindu wedding includes a flame (false flame in the exhibit). There’s also a miniature of a Hindu wedding.
Not being Catholic, I had never thought about a crucifix such as I saw from the 1942 Bednarchik/Novick wedding in St. Casimir’s. Presented at the time of the wedding, it includes candles and oil to be used one day for extreme unction, a feature that I found deeply moving.
The Brayton Education Room had “Elmira Will See it Through! World War I Fund-Raising Posters.” This was the golden age of the poster, guaranteeing an eye-popping exhibit. ‘Beat Back the Hun’ and ‘Remember Belgium’ appeal on the basis of German atrocities… and while propaganda blew them up, they were all too horribly real. ‘Stamp! Stamp! Stamp! The Boys Are Marching’ plays on an old Civil War song (‘Tramp, Tramp, Tramp’) to sell savings stamp. A 1919 sheet showing suggested ways to display posters uses for examples the very posters to either side. That was fun to see.
And then there was what we actually came for: “Stitched Across the Valley: A Cross Cultural Embroidery Exhibit.” This developed five key themes – social status; national and ethnic identity; industrial and domestic production; family stories; and tradition and individual innovation.
I would have liked to see the technique of each piece identified, and my observation is that making a label in 12-point type, then placing it at the foot of a dressmaker’s dummy, is an exercise in futility. But those are minor matters. All of it was interesting, and some of the pieces were arresting. I had never even heard of double-sided stitching on a sheet of transparent silk. I’ll just repeat what I wrote in my notebook: wow!
I also was not familiar with the Peruvian apiller technique, with its rounded figures and its frequent use for family and community histories. “Never Forget” commemorates the 1980-2000 deaths at government hands.
Besides advanced and unusual techniques there were printed embroidery such as a simple picture of the Fatima appearance, a historic cross-stitch sampler, a crewel scene of a barn in winter. While I liked the barn, and was staggered by the doubled-sided silk, my favorite was Aniko Farkas’s brightly-colored flowers in Hungarian kalocsa style, followed by a flowered white skirt and blouse by an unknown Polish artisan.
So – our communities are varied, and their histories are long. Drop in at the museum on Water Street, and expand your horizons.
Stitched