Tuesday, 3 July 2001, 10:38am
2001-2002

Artwork Information
Stella Brennan's stitch-per-pixel embroidery of her iMac OS 8 desktop took over a year to do, and she needed help. A sewing circle of friends and family helped her complete it. By the time it was done, it was obsolete. Brennan had a new computer, running OS X. Translating the digital into the pre-industrial, the work yokes opposing values: the computer's currency and speed with craft's traditionalism and laboriousness. The woven computer screen can be read as daft, like an expressionist painting converted into paint-by-numbers. It becomes deft when it prompts us to consider more subtle historical connections, like the use of punch cards to control Jacquard weaving looms during the industrial revolution, and Ada Lovelace's proposal to use them to programme Charles Babbage's analytical engine, the 19th century proto-computer. While its title suggests an instant, the piece enfolds time: the time taken to make it, the time taken to view it, and the stretch of technological, economic and social history from the Bayeux Tapestry through the industrial revolution to the Macintosh. (Snake Oil, 2005)
- Artist
- Title
- Tuesday, 3 July 2001, 10:38am
- Production Date
- 2001-2002
- Medium
- needlepoint embroidery
- Dimensions
- 865 x 1140 x 20 mm
- Credit Line
- Chartwell Collection, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2005
- Accession No
- C2005/1/15
- Copyright
- Copying restrictions apply
- Department
- New Zealand Art
- Display Status
- Not on display