Visual splendour
Nyonya needlework on show at Peranakan Museum in Singapore.
NYONYA needlework is a distinctive form of Peranakan Chinese art, but the embroidery and beadwork of Straits- born Chinese women tell stories beyond those of their own culture.
The new exhibition, Nyonya Needlework, at the Peranakan Museum in Singapore aims to show this. It features close to 200 items of embroidery and beadwork from Singapore’s national collection – the largest collection of Nyonya needlework in public hands – as well as some loans from the Rijksmuseum and the National Museum of World Cultures, both in the Netherlands.
The museum’s director, Dr Alan Chong, says: “The Peranakans are not just a little community living in the Straits Settlements taking up peculiar cultural habits.
“The Peranakan world is really a blended community that represents the best of South- East Asia where we live in relationship to many cultures and, regardless of our ethnic descent, we adapt the traditions and artforms of others.”
Such cross- cultural dialogue is apparent in Nyonya beadwork and embroidery.
He says: “Some of the forms are Chinese, some are Malay and many of the materials and techniques are in fact European. But the curators will be the first to concede that sometimes, they don’t even know where certain techniques are from; they are a combination of many different things.”
The exhibition’s lead curator, Dr Cheah Hwei- Fen, says the “borrowing, copying and translation of methods and designs” from both regional and international textile are what make Peranakan needlework iconic.
She says: “With translation, something is always lost of the original. But in this case, so much more is gained. Nyonya needlework evolves into a distinctive form of art and is recognised as part of Peranakan culture.”
The exhibition includes immaculately embroidered and beaded decorative hangings and accessories that show how symbols are used to convey auspicious meanings in Peranakan culture, and how Nyonya needlework from Java, Malacca, Penang and Singapore differ in style and form. It, however, transcends mere craftsmanship and visual splendour ur.
At the exhibition, an eight- panel table screen from early 20th century Penang is one of the highl lights. This eight- pan nel screen, measuring 42cm x 88cm, is m modelled on Chinese table screens a and is a rare example of Nyonya needlework ( silk embroid ered with silk floss).
It is fin nely embroidered an nd was probably a gift or commemorative pie ece for a patron well versed in Chinese culture. Chinese text, making reference to Taoist deities, is stitched on the pane els at the two ends. It is not commonn for Nyonya needlen work to featuref Chinese script and the lengthl as well a s the complexity and legibility of it in screen this make it even more notable.
A handkerchief or tray cover ( silk, metal thread, glass beads and possibly coral) from Sumatra Palembang, dated second- half of 19th century, is another piece to investigate. The subdued colour palette of brown, blue and teal green, and the restrained use of gilded thread in this piece of embroidery set it apart from other examples of Nyonya needlework, which often come in bejewelled tones.
Its subtle appearance, however, belies the exquisite drawn thread embroidery and creative design, which mimics the pattern of another type of textile – batik. This method of embroidery is not widely associated with Nyonya needlework although it was fairly common in Sumatra.
Elsewhere, the exibition has a pair of ankle boots ( silk, lametta, metal, sequins, gold, brass, stucco) from Java, late 19th century.
Nyonya needlework in footwear is commonly associated with slippers, but wealthy Nyonyas in Java also wore velvet boots with gold embroidery for weddings and on formal occasions. This pair of boots borrows its form from European women’s ankle boots that were in vogue in the 1880s.
Its gilded heels with pin- prick design, however, bear the influence of embroidered velvet slippers with high gold heels that were favoured by Eurasian women in Java at that time. The embroidery techniq que of lametta couched over a paddin ng of thick cord and gold purl is sim milar to that of raised gold embroidery y from Java.
The wearer of this pair of boots would have made both a fashi ion statement as well as an assertiion of her identity as a sophisticate w who dwelt fluidly between cultures s.
Dr Chong says: “These piece es of needlework are important bec cause they represent an openness to o other cultures. So rather than to try and pin them specifically to influen nce or community groups, we should d look at them as wonderful example es of how many ideas came togeth er to create something new.” – Th he Straits Times/ Asia News Ne etwork