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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Textile arts > General
The little-known art of Berlin Work was once the most commonly
practiced art form among European women. Pictorial Embroidery in
England is the first academic study of both pictorial Berlin Work
and its precursor, needlepainting, exploring their cultural status
in the 18th and 19th centuries. From Enlightenment practices of
copying to the development of an industrial aesthetic and the
making of the modern amateur, Berlin Work developed as an official
knowledge associated with notions of cultural and scientific
progress. However, with the advent of the Arts and Crafts movement
and modernist aesthetics, Berlin Work was gradually demoted to a
craft hobby. Delving into the social, cultural and economic context
of English pictorial embroidery, Pictorial Embroidery in England
recovers Berlin Work as an art form, and demonstrates how this
overlooked practice was once at the centre of cultural life.
After training as a graphic designer in Hungary, the plastic artist
Vera Székely (1919-1994), a member of the Székely-Borderie
ceramicist collective, tackled work in clay, metal, wood and glass
to reach her artistic fulfillment in textiles. From this point on,
Vera Székely acknowledged “swimming and dancing in space to
leave a trace in it†with her ephemeral installations of bent
felt, her stretched canvas structures and “braced sails†that
would be exhibited throughout the world, notably at the Biennale
internationale de la tapisserie, Lausanne (1981) the Musée
national d’art moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou (1982), the
Musée d’art moderne de la ville de Paris (1985), the Lunds
Konsthall, Sweden (1988). Text in English and French.
Winner of the East Anglian Book of the Year 2015 Winner of the New
Angle Book Prize 2017 John Craske, a Norfok fisherman, was born in
1881 and in 1917, when he had just turned thirty-six, he fell
seriously ill. For the rest of his life he kept moving in and out
of what was described as 'a stuporous state'. In 1923 he started
making paintings of the sea and boats and the coastline seen from
the sea, and later, when he was too ill to stand and paint, he
turned to embroidery, which he could do lying in bed. His
embroideries were also the sea, including his masterpiece, a huge
embroidery of The Evacuation of Dunkirk. Very few facts about
Craske are known, and only a few scattered photographs have
survived, together with accounts by the writer Sylvia Townsend
Warner and her lover Valentine Ackland, who discovered Craske in
1937. So - as with all her books - Julia Blackburn's account of his
life is far from a conventional biography. Instead it is a quest
which takes her in many strange directions - to fishermen's
cottages in Sheringham, a grand hotel fallen on hard times in Great
Yarmouth and to the isolated Watch House far out in the Blakeney
estuary; to Cromer and the bizarre story of Einstein's stay there,
guarded by dashing young women in jodhpurs with shotguns. Threads
is a book about life and death and the strange country between the
two where John Craske seemed to live. It is also about life after
death, as Julia's beloved husband Herman, a vivid presence in the
early pages of the book, dies before it is finished. In a gentle
meditation on art and fame; on the nature of time and the fact of
mortality; and illustrated with Craske's paintings and
embroideries, Threads shows, yet again, that Julia Blackburn can
conjure a magic that is spellbinding and utterly her own.
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