untitled sampler, Elisabeth Pitcher

Artwork Overview

untitled sampler, 1720
Where object was made: United States
Material/technique: silk thread; eyelet stitch; embroidering; linen; chain stitch; satin stitch; cross-stitching
Dimensions:
Object Height/Width (Height x Width): 60.96 x 21.59 cm
Object Height/Width (Height x Width): 24 x 8 1/2 in
Credit line: Source unknown
Accession number: 0000.0947
Not on display

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Images

Label texts

Inventing Childhood
Needlework samplers constituted an important component in the lives and education of Western women from as early as the 16th century. Young girls were taught to sew by the age of five, and needlework was part of school curricula in Europe and the Americas. Samplers helped young girls improve their needlework by teaching them new stitches and motifs, but they also reinforced other educational priorities, such as learning the alphabet and memorizing Bible verses. By the 18th and 19th centuries when these particular examples were created, samplers served to demonstrate the stitcher’s knowledge, as well as her virtue and sense of industry. Many were signed by their makers, who often specified how old they were at the time of completion.
Inventing Childhood
Needlework samplers constituted an important component in the lives and education of Western women from as early as the 16th century. Young girls were taught to sew by the age of five, and needlework was part of school curricula in Europe and the Americas. Samplers helped young girls improve their needlework by teaching them new stitches and motifs, but they also reinforced other educational priorities, such as learning the alphabet and memorizing Bible verses. By the 18th and 19th centuries when these particular examples were created, samplers served to demonstrate the stitcher’s knowledge, as well as her virtue and sense of industry. Many were signed by their makers, who often specified how old they were at the time of completion.

Exhibitions

Citations

Curry, David Park. Stitches in Time: Samplers in the Museum's Collection. Lawrence, Kansas: The University of Kansas Museum of Art, 1975.