Ashmolean acquires major collection of English embroideries from Micheál and Elizabeth Feller
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, September 1, 2025


Ashmolean acquires major collection of English embroideries from Micheál and Elizabeth Feller
Panel: The Judgement of Paris Mid to late 17th century 45.3 x 54.1 cm Stitches & techniques: appliqué, detached needlepoint, knots, laid and couched, queen, raised work, split Materials: glass beads, silk satin, metal threads, (wrapped, coiled silk, wrapped with metal wire), mica, padding (unknown), parchment, pearls, silk floss, and overspun silk, wire Ground: satin weave cream silk © M & E Feller. Photography by R Holdsworth FRPS.



OXFORD.- The Ashmolean has acquired one of the world’s finest collections of historic English embroideries which has been given to the Museum by collectors Micheál and Elizabeth Feller. The gift comprises 61 pieces which span the whole of the seventeenth century; and these are currently on display in the summer exhibition, The Eye of the Needle which runs until 12 October. The Feller embroideries have long been considered one of the world’s most important groups of historic textiles and the gift is estimated to be worth in excess of £500,000. It has come to the Museum in honour of Professor Christopher Brown CBE who will retire as Director of the Ashmolean on 30 September.

Professor Brown says: ‘I am profoundly grateful to Micheál and Elizabeth Feller for this gift. The collection has been built, over many years, through Micheál and Elizabeth’s passion and dedication; and the gift to the Museum, where the embroideries can be enjoyed by thousands of visitors, is an act of enormous generosity.

‘The Ashmolean has, throughout its history, established important friendships with private collectors and it is often said that the Museum has become a “collection of collections” where we take pride in honouring the people who have built collections through individual enthusiasm and commitment. The Feller Collection is just such an example; and it is a huge personal honour that this gift comes to the Ashmolean in my last week as Director. ’

The pieces which have been given to the Museum are seventeenth-century embroideries which include dramatic pictorial panels, samplers, domestic items and costume pieces. These embroideries were made during one of the most turbulent centuries in English history, when religious and political conflict split families and the country. Beyond the opportunity for demonstrating technical ability, the embroideries illustrate the themes and concerns which occupied the minds of the young women making them. They often depict biblical stories at a time when religious issues, including the use of images, aroused great controversy. Similarly, during a period of increasing urbanization the pictorial pieces show idyllic country scenes with imaginary creatures and flowers.

The Feller gift extends and compliments the Ashmolean’s existing collection of sixteenth and seventeenth-century embroideries. This collection was established by the bequest in 1947 of the noted connoisseur John Francis Mallett for whom one of the Museum’s European art galleries is named. Mallett amassed a personal collection of ceramics, furniture, silver and decorative arts, in addition to fine English embroideries, including the Ashmolean’s hugely popular ‘frog purse’. The Museum’s English embroideries were celebrated in the exhibition, ‘Curious Works’, in 2004, curated by Dr Mary Brooks.

The Fellers are well known to residents of Oxford as the proprietors of the renowned butcher’s shop in the City’s Covered Market. They started collecting embroideries when they were first married and have continued to buy pieces for over forty years. The interest in textiles and sewing originated with Elizabeth whose mother was a seamstress and who is, herself, an accomplished embroiderer. The pieces which the Fellers have collected reflect their interest in the skills and varied techniques of embroidery, and in the individual stories and wider history that the embroideries illustrate.

Dr Mary Brooks, Director MA International Cultural Heritage Management, Durham University, and curator of The Eye of the Needle, says: ‘The Feller’s generous gift enriches the Ashmolean’s collection. Remarkable for the dramatic stories, detailed patterns and luxurious materials, these embroideries have huge research potential as well as being a visual delight.’

Elizabeth Feller, says: ‘Thanks to my mother’s influence, sewing and embroidery has been a meaningful activity throughout my life. Our collection of embroideries worked by other people began with small household items such as needlepoint cushions and went on to include samplers, panels and a huge variety of other objects, all steeped in English history and the stories of the individuals who made them – and that is what we love. Micheál and I are delighted that the seventeenth-century embroideries will now find a home at the Ashmolean where they will be cared for and enjoyed by people for many years to come.’










Today's News

September 26, 2014

Museum Folkwang in Essen exhibits 400 masterpieces in an exhibition on Japonisme

Exhibition at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection focuses on post World War II neo-avantgarde in Italy

The Whitney Museum of American Art's photography collection transformed by promised gift

Exhibition at Fundacion Mapfre in Madrid includes 150 paintings by Joaquín Sorolla

New world record set at Bonhams in London as rare life-like doll sells for £242,500

Highly important jewels from the collection of Dimitri Mavrommatis to be offered at Sotheby's

British Museum explores the image of the witch and demonised female figures from 1450 until 1900

Fwd: The Telephone Game: Kate Shepherd's most recent paintings on view at Galerie Lelong in New York

Gutenberg Bible leaf and Galileo's Systema Cosmicum featured in Swann Galleries auction

Ashmolean acquires major collection of English embroideries from Micheál and Elizabeth Feller

Chief Curator Katerina Atanassova to leave the McMichael Canadian Art Collection

Major exhibition of prints by CRW Nevinson opens at Osborne Samuel Gallery

Exhibition of works by James Castle opens at the Smithsonian American Art Museum

Franz Erhard Walther's 'Walking Pedestals and Places to Stand' on view at the Städel Museum

Mysteries of the Unseen World opens at the National Museum of Natural History

Bonhams presents rare painting by Aleksandr Yakovlev on Chinese theater

One artist group and seven artists exhibit at Peham Art Center

Archive of pioneering astronomer George Willis Ritchey to be offered at Bonhams New York

Exhibition at Kunstmuseum St. Gallen confronts classic colour field paintings

Mixografia Workshop to debut Ed Ruscha 'Rusty Signs' print series at IFPDA Print Fair

Exhibition of artworks by Kyla Chevrier, Anne Truitt, and Maria Walker at Sgorbati Projects

Peabody Essex Museum acquires collection of late Boston fashion icon Marilyn Riseman

The Contemporary Austin presents a large-scale solo exhibition of artist Do Ho Suh

Diaries reveal artists' day-to-day lives and historic moments




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 




Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful