Matchmaker, Matchmaker - Elizabeth M. Kurella Curator of Antique
Transcription
Matchmaker, Matchmaker - Elizabeth M. Kurella Curator of Antique
In the fall of 2003, the Sweet Briar Museum becomes the recipient of the J. Margaret Barber - Jane Connin Lace Study Collection. This unique collection of just over a hundred pieces includes study specimens of lace from the seventeenth through the early twentieth centuries; fashion items including collars, cuffs, lappets, and berthas from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; and an assortment of booklets, lace postcards, and study material. The arrival of the lace at Sweet Briar together with hundreds of digital images and pages of documentation will make that museum one of the best locations in the country to study antique lace, its place in 19th century society, and lace collecting. This article originally was presented as a lecture at the 2003 convention of the International Old Lacers, Inc. (Now the International Organization of Lace, Inc. ) Elizabeth M. Kurella is the author of Guide to Lace and Linens, Secrets of Real Lace, Anybody Can Mend Lace and Linens, and the LaceCurator.info website. Matchmaker, Matchmaker Bringing together a lace collection, a donor, and a museum By Elizabeth M. Kurella Once upon a time, about a dozen years ago, Jane Connin arrived on my doorstep in a driving rainstorm, her grandmother’s lace collection stashed in her car. She heard I had written a book on identifying vintage lace, and was determined to have her grandmother’s collection identified, and eventually, to fulfill her grandmother’s wishes that others would learn to love and appreciate fine lace through her collection. Expecting the usual assortment of crochet and embroidery, I put off the visit for weeks. I will never forget my amazement when we opened a box and began to unroll eighteenth century Brussels lappets and seventeenth century Genoese and Milanese flounce fragments. J. Margaret Kyle Barber was born in in a sod house in Nebraska in the late 19th century, educated in the East, and determined to see the world. A job with the International Red Cross allowed her to travel through Europe at a time young ladies stayed at home. These were years when collecting vintage lace was a well-respected avocation of society’s elite, and J. Margaret became a collecting connoisseur. This summer, as Jane planned a “perhaps permanent” move to Australia, she commissioned me to photograph and document the collection, and select a museum for the lace. She knew I really understood the value of the material as a collection, shared her grandmother’s love of the unique vintage handwork, and could share the stories the threads had to tell. Above: detail from a late seventeenth century Milanese bobbin lace ecclesiastical cuff with traditional representation of St. Anthony of Padua. Raised folded tallies for hair curls, bead eyes, and additional raised details make this especially interteresting to lacemakers. Cuffs match other lace in the Ikle collection in the lace museum in St. Gallen, Switzerland. Sweet Briar Museum was selected because, with the lace pieces belonging to their founder, they already had an expressed interest in lace. With its focus on the fine arts and programs in museum studies, Sweet Briar offers the possibility of reaching and teaching museum curators of the future to appreciate Monogram from Margaret Kyle Barber’s handkerchief. Above right: J. Margaret Kyle Barber circa 1940, on one of her European adventures, Above left: J. Margaret in the 1890s. and recognize laces, and understand the value of showing actual laces in the context of historic homes and in conjunction with fine art representations of vintage lace in portraits. The museum is small enough to be able to keep the lace together as a collection, yet large enough to be able to properly take care of it and make it available for study to a variety of groups with different interests. Their facilities, including a convention center, make it an ideal location for workshops. Another plus: the potential for a supportive group of volunteers in the area lacemaking groups. perhaps from Finland? — invite lacemakers to imitate Hungary’s Halas lace on a whole different scale. What makes this collection special? The laces, certainly, but also the stories that they tell when together as a collection. From the monogrammed handkerchief and tiny needle lace monograms for table linens, the laces give a glimpse of what it meant to be a lady in the first half of the twentieth century. Lacemakers — a wonderful resource is arriving on your doorstep. Come, enjoy, and support your local museum! Those interested in costume and fine arts will find a worth-while grouping of fashion items — perhaps encouraging the start of a wider collection. Finally, the digital images and documentation establish a model for preparing lace for study, and raise the possibility of on-line teaching or sale of educational CD’s to continue to support and develop the collection. Some fragments are presented finished on all sides, attached to a colored fabric, and identified with a label, as early twentieth century study specimens. Until the beginning of the Second World War, New York City dealers and fine department stores like Nieman Marcus in Texas, B.Altman in New York, and Marshall Field in Chicago offered these specimens to high-society ladies who collected vintage lace the same way many collected fine art. Lacemakers and embroiderers will find unique thread manipulations and stitches to study and take inspiration from in many of the examples. Tiny folded tallies that form curly hair tucked under the halos of the saints in seventeenth century Milanese bobbin Church lace invite today’s Milanese lacemakers to expand their repertoire, and add creative raised effects to their laces. A unique collar-and-cuff set from the late nineteenth century invites lacemakers to go beyond flat Youghal into the world Pat Earnshaw calls “freakish” Youghal, and add wild raised work to their Irish needle laces. Needlewoven birds, dragons, and fanciful horses — Above: Pair of mid-eighteenth century lappets (headdress streamers). Above : Whitework fragment prepared as a collector’s study specimen. Connin-Barber collection includes several pieces of fine whitework embroidery. Right: Unique piece offers a research challenge: needleweaving technique resembles Hungarian Halas, but on a coarse scale. There are suggestions that this needleweaving technique was also worked in Finland, a place J. Margaret visited, and collected early twentieth century Finnish bobbin lace fragments.