An Old Skool Sampler

If you got your hands on a copy of the 2010 3CR Seeds of Dissent Calendar and flicked it open to everyone’s favourite consumerist month: December, this is what you’ll find:

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Each of the contributing artists was asked to chose a theme and using our creative tools, discuss that issue in relation to the future.  I chose an anti-consumerist/waste theme (obviously).  And decided this was an opportunity to finally get around to stitching my sampler.

A sampler is something a learner stitcher is supposed to do.  But it’s more than just about learning, it’s a kind of right of passage.  And having now seen samplers from my own family, I have been keen to get into doing my own for a while.

This particular sampler is loosely based off the design of the sampler by Margaret Harper (1782) so it really is pretty old skool.  But following on with an old tradition of subverting the ‘feminine arts’ the quote is not biblical, yet still rather moralistic and prescriptive.

We were also asked to provide a few words about what our piece was about.  Here’s mine:

A Sampler For Our Times

In this time of global environmental and economic crisis the looming challenges can sometimes seem insurmountable, especially considering that Australia is the biggest carbon consuming country on our lovely planet.

While the challenge to turn this around may seem enormous it is not impossible to meet.  One of the most important and effective changes we need to take on is our relationship with stuff.  Indeed, it is our obsession with material things that is such a massive contributor to our environmental excesses.

There is an age-old saying, commonly heard during the last global depression, ‘Use it up, Wear it out, Make do, or Do without’.  It sounds a bit dreary.  But people who are relearning the skill of making things themselves can testify that when you MAKE culture rather than simply consuming it, life all of a sudden becomes a hell of a lot more interesting, revolutionary even.

This cross-stitched piece is a traditional sampler but with a modern twist.  A sampler was a coming-of-age process for a young woman, especially during the 1800s.  Samplers were employed not only to teach basic stitches for decoration and mending but also to learn basic literacy and numeracy skills, as well as a bit of healthy moralistic indoctrination.  The quotes included were often biblical and always included some guiding doctrine to live by.  Sometimes they were cheekily subversive.  This piece hopes to continue that tradition.

You really need a copy of this Calendar on your wall next year! So get onto the website and grab a copy.  Or even better, come to the launch at Readings Carlton on Friday the 13th of November at 6pm and pick up a copy and a nice glass of wine.  And say hi to the artists and the great team that made this awesome calendar happen.

As for the original piece, I’m looking for somewhere to put it on display with the view to sell it to raise even more funds for 3CR.  I’ve got a couple of options but I’m open to hearing other ideas.  So if you have a brilliant wall in a shop, gallery, museum or whatever that you think would be just perfect to have this hanging on, get in touch.

Finally, and before you all ask, yes the pattern will be available for sale very soon.  And of course, all proceeds go straight to 3CR – to keep Melbourne’s most radical radio, rad!

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Craftivism, Media, Stuff You Can Buy, Tutorials/Patterns, xstitch

2 Responses to “An Old Skool Sampler”

  1. Sarah says:

    you absolutely have to display this piece for sale in our shop window…Friends of the Earth Bookshop…its perfect. either now or closer to xmas is good for me.

    cheers,
    Sarah

  2. [...] I didn’t hesitate for a second last year when the fine folk there asked me to contribute to the 2010 Seeds of Dissent Calendar.  I still consider that piece to be my greatest stitching [...]

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