Her Place in History, 1986
petit point embroidery in hand-cut wood-veneer panel mount in a found wooden frame
7.6 x 10.5 cm (petit point); 29 x 40 cm (frame)
signed, dated and titled ‘Narelle Jubelin 1986/‘Her place in History’ (on the reverse)
Provenance
Mori Gallery, Sydney
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 1986
Exhibited
(probably) His Story: A Small Reminder, Mori Gallery, Sydney, 1986
“Needlework is traditionally a supremely feminine medium - passive, repetitive, labour intensive and gently appealing. However Jubelin deploys these qualities deliberately in order to ‘seduce’ the viewer; her tiny representations of New South Wales’ public parklands and monuments are indeed exquisitely appealing, but they are no more innocent than the scenes they represent. As Jubelin wrote concerning her exhibition at Mori’s Gallery in October 1986, ‘His Story tells of patriarchal colonisation. Each sequence of accidents and unforeseen events ‘echoing the tales their forefather's told’ weaves the elaborate fabric of culture…. The form is familiar and insidious. Parklands eulogise, warfare gracing their monuments as tacit bastions of male power. The founding days are over but the select restoration of their relics conserves the consistency of the patterns” (Bronwyn Hanna, Review Paper ‘The Subversive Stitch’, Transition, RMIT, Melbourne, July 1987).
Image courtesy of the artist and The Commercial, Sydney. Photograph by Geoff Boccalatte