An egg at Easter

British Museum 2018,8050.219 decorated in the drop-pull Ukranian style by Marta Jelenka, aged 11

I had a passing thought early this morning about the decoration of eggs for Easter, and, (recalling Kirsten Olsson’s iconic ägget, which I love, and wrote about in my Yokes book), about how traditional decorative practices might inspire other types of design.

Kirsten Olsson’s ägget yoke, inspired by a decorative papier maché Easter egg. Read more about this design in Yokes

I love a decorated egg, but what kinds of patterns and motifs, materials and techniques have such designs traditionally involved? And which cultures and communities have shared such distinctive practices? Interested to find out more, I headed straight to the British Museum collections and typed the words “decorated egg” into the search box.

British Museum 2018,8050.55. Straw appliqued egg from Haná, Moravia. Collected Easter 1978

Several egg-cellent and very happy hours have ensued.

British Museum 2018,8050.99. Wax resist technique. Collected in Germany, 1997.

I discovered decorative Easter eggs formed from many different (non eggy) materials. There were beautiful Swedish papier maché eggs, just like the one which had inspired Kerstin Olsson.

British Museum 2018,8050.133. Papier mache egg in two halves. Collected in Malmo, Easter 1984.

As well as eggs made of wood . . .

. . . and glass.

British Museum 2018,8050.18. Bohemian opal glass, gold gilded. Collected at Freistadt in Ober-Österreich, south of Linz, near the border with the Czech Republic in 1978
British Museum 2018,8050.19. Bohemian green glass, painted. Collected at Freistadt in Ober-Österreich, south of Linz, near the border with the Czech Republic in 1978

In the main, though, the Easter eggs in the British museum are of the conventional eggy sort – that is – laid by actual hens, ducks and occasionally geese . . .

British Museum 2018,8050.131. Painted goose egg, collected in Copenhagen, Easter, 1984.

. . .and then decorated with a wide variety of materials.

Some are covered with intricate textile designs, using ric-rac or wool

British Museum 2018,8050.68. Chicken and/ or egg, with wool decoration and woodchip mount. Collected in Czech Republic, 1977 or 1978.

. . . and there are many beautiful examples decorated with straw appliqué

British Museum 2018,8050.61 “From Haná, Moravia, in a straw appliqué style peculiar to this region”

But most have been coloured (with natural dyes or paint) and then decorated using a wide variety of techniques

British Museum 2018,8050.206. Decorated by Elizabeth Bransby after 1870.

hand painting

British Museum  2018,8050.8. Austrian, collected 1977.

batik (wax resistence) decorating

British Museum 2018,8050. Acquired before 1971. Slovakia

scratch resistance

British Museum 2018,8050.116 . Collected 1975, Balassagyarmat. Hungary

acid etching

British Museum 2018,8050.36 . Collected in Burgenland 1962

and transfer / resistance . . .

British Museum 2018,8050.209 “Decorated with plant imprints by Mrs Herdman of Acomb, Northumberland. She has won numerous competitions with eggs decorated in this way” collected before 1971

In this last technique, leaves or flowers are stuck to the surface of the egg, creating a stencil which blocks out the dye or colouring

British Museum 2018,8050.203 ferns stencilled onto eggshell, wooden beads. Collected Zurich, Easter, 1987

the negative-imprinting effect is similar to a cyanotype, and is particularly beautiful.

British Museum 2018,8050.72. Resist dyed in dark green with natural dyes using flowers for the pattern. Purchased from ‘Ferline’, 66 Champs Elysees, Paris, April 27th, 1973.

As I poked around the collection, I soon found myself gravitating to particular types of pattern and motif . . .

British Museum 2018,8050.90 Collected in Nieder Lausitz pre 1971 and decorated in distinctive Sorb style

. . .enjoying eggs which reminded me of (knitted) yokes or hat crowns . . .

British Museum 2018,8050.15. Thin strips of straw on dark blue ground. Collected in Vienna, Easter 1978.

and being drawn to eggs whose decorative geometry felt particularly rhythmic

British Museum 2018,8050.129 . Finland, 1983.

. . . or knitterly . . .

British Museum 2018,8050.39. Wax resist egg, collected in Czech Republic 1978

Many eggs stood out to me simply for possessing their own unique beauty

British Museum 2018,8050.30 Purchased from Albanian catholics in Ulcinj market, Montenegro, Easter 1977

while others seemed particularly distinctive examples of an aesthetic of simplicity . . .

British Museum 2018,8050.128 “decorated by Csango women in the Gyimes district, in the Western Carpathian mountains” collected 1987

or decorative excess (chutzpah, even)

British Museum 2018,8050.49. Collected in Brno, 1970

I love this colourful egg, for example, which has been deftly painted with Mondrian-like geometric patterns on one side. . .

British Museum 2018,8050.49. Collected in Brno, 1970

. . and swirly folksy-florals on the other.

British Museum 2018,8050.49. Collected in Brno, 1970

an virtuosic egg of two halves!

British Museum 2018,8050.75. This egg was made in a Mennonite village in the Pfalz, or Palatinate, in south-west Germany, and is decorated in a typical Mennonite style using rust and whey dye

I began to discover that different decorative styles of egg were highly specific, often being created in particular places

British Museum 2018,8050.232 . Wax resist egg decorated by displaced Ukranians, living in London after second world war.

. . . by particular groups of people.

British Museum 2018,8050.98 dyed black with scratch-etched design, in destinctive Sorb style

whose distinctive styles of egg decoration might be expressive of regional and local traditions.

British Museum 2018,8050. Polish love-token egg

In some places, eggs might be exchanged as love tokens

British Museum 2018,8050.22. Dyed blue egg with acid-etched rhyme, Austria, 1978: Dies Ei zerbricht, doch meine Liebe nicht !’ (This egg breaks to pieces, but my love never!)

or be decorated with particular motifs . .

British Museum 2018,8050.64 . Decorated with pussy willow, the first tree to bloom in spring Czech republic, Easter 1973

which carried recognisable symbolism, in the realms of religion, folk art and popular culture.

British Museum 2018,8050.222 Ukranian painted wood egg with stylised stags or goats

Easter eggs often suggested spring and growth, abundance and fertility in general terms . . .

British Museum 2018,8050.222 Hungarian wax-resist egg decorated with rakes and oak leaves. The rakes are a traditional symbol, used to bring rain for a good harvest.

even as they commemorated the familiar Christian festival.

British Museum  2018,8050.201 Swiss wax resist egg with Easter cross collected in Basel, 1980

Through examining the acquisition notes associated with each egg-example in the British Museum collection, I discovered that some styles of egg decoration were highly specific to specific locales and communities . .

British Museum 2018,8050.36  inscribed VESEL VAZAM (Happy Easter). Curator’s note reads: Burgenland Croats emigrated in the 16th century during the Turkish occupation, with a second wave arriving in the 18th century. During the 20th century they were persecuted after both world wars before gaining minority status in 1955 with the Austrian Treaty of Independence.

. . .and that, in the many cases where such communities had migrated . . .

British Museum  2018,8050.162. Egg painted in regional style by Polish community in London after second world war

. . . or been displaced . . .

British Museum 2018,8050.179 painted by Russians living in London with an inscription in Russian, ‘Христос воскресe’ (Christ is risen).

. . .that the decoration of eggs – a shared practice, creating objects decorated with the motifs or patterns familiar to ones homeland — might become an important expression of community . . .

British Museum 2018,8050.223 egg painted by Ukranian refugees living in London

. . . and solidarity

 British Museum 2018,8050.230 egg painted by Ukranian refugees living in London

among groups of refugees.

British Museum 2018,8050.220 . Decorated by Ukranian refugee, Marta Jalenka, aged 11.

The eggs in the British Museum collection were so beautiful

British Museum 2018,8050.141. Wax resist egg collected in Poland 1979

and had so many important stories to tell.

British Museum 2018,8050.237 . Hand painted by Paul Luniw. Born in Halifax, Yorkshire where his parents had settled from Ukraine in 1948, Luniw learnt to decorate eggs as a child, watching his mother, and appeared on Blue Peter, with his eggs in an interview with Valerie Singleton in 1972. After being ordained a Catholic priest in 1982, Luniw worked in the Ukrainian communities in Philadelphia, USA, and Manchester, Bury, Stockport and Liverpool, UK. He has decorated eggs wherever he has lived and has given his decorated eggs to Pope John Paul II and, in 2019, to Pope Francis.

As I continued searching, browsing, looking at decorative Easter eggs, I realised that the sense of cohesion I felt about the British Museum collection (despite the many disparate styles represented within it) was not at all incidental.

British Museum  2018,8050.201 collected by Venetia Newall in Basel, 1980

This egg collection felt cohesive because it was largely the work of one woman, whose name was Venetia Newall.

British Museum 2018,8050.110. Easter egg, shell, resist-dyed with ferns and leaves for the pattern on the natural brown shell, against a red ground. Venetia Newall recorded in 1983 that this egg was “made by the Serbian family of Krajchovich, descendants of Serb refugees from the Turks who settled fifteen miles north of Budapest at Szentendre in the 18th century. Of the town’s 15,000 inhabitants most are now Hungarian, but forty Serbian families survive in the Old Town where there is an Orthodox cathedral and several Orthodox churches.”

Born in London in 1935, Newall was evacuated from her English home in the early years of the second world war, and grew up, away from home with her paternal grandmother in the United States

British Museum 2018,8050.143. A Polish love token egg from Newall’s collection

After peace was declared in 1945, she returned to the UK, and went on to study literature at St Andrews.

British Museum 2018,8050.207 . Egg shell dyed with onion skins and decorated with natural flower and leaf shapes by Eva Lewis of Kings Meaburn, Westmorland. Collected by Newall Easter 1975

She married a journalist, who had grown up in the north of England.

British Museum 2018,8050.196 . Described by Newall as ‘From the Ober Krain or Kranj district. The black colour is generally achieved with oak barkby the Slovenian mountaineers and the usual batik technique is sometimes varied by substituting oil for wax’ Kranj city is twenty kilometres north of Ljubiana

. . . and who wrote for the Times about central and Eastern Europe, and the new cold war. While travelling around Europe with her husband, Newall began to develop an interest in the decorative Easter eggs she had spotted being sold by craftswomen and market traders in many different locations.

British Museum  2018,8050.204 . Collected by Newall in Bern in 1987. “Newall recorded that this egg was decorated by Miss Kathrin Kindler using a stocking to hold the leaves in place”

She began to collect the eggs, learning more about the stories and traditions of their making, eventually producing An Egg at Easter, which was published in 1971, and received a doctoral award from St Andrews.

plate from An Egg for Easter

As well as writing what is still the definitive tome on the subject of decorative eggs, Newall was an inspiring feminist academic, shaking up the rather stuffy and old-fashioned Folklore Society with her “unsuitable” 1960s mod attire, and eventually transforming and modernising research into British and European folk traditions alongside other innovative women like Katharine Briggs and Hilda Davidson.

plate from An Egg for Easter

Newall’s work often shone a light on the experiences of refugees and those displaced by war.

plate from An Egg for Easter

Newall was an Anglo-Catholic, but she was always interested in many different spiritual traditions and cultures, promoting interfaith understanding through her work on the council of Christians and Jews, and ensuring that Britain’s immigrant cultures were included in contemporary folklore research, organising London conferences with titles like Folklore and Anti-Semitism and Black Britains: Jamaicans and their Folklore.

plate from An Egg for Easter

Newall also became a lifelong campaigner for LGBT rights (after losing a friend who took his own life, after being blackmailed as a gay man, when homosexuality was “illegal”). Her 1986 presidential address to the Folklore Society – delivered at the height of the AIDS crisis – focussed on the history of anti LGBT discrimination, drawing examples from medieval folklore to the discriminatory slurs then being scrawled on the walls of contemporary US bathrooms.

Venetia Newall, 1935-2017

By any measure, then, Venetia Newall was, then, a very good egg indeed. I’ve so enjoyed discovering her marvellous collection, and finding out about her inspiring life and work. Today definitely seems an appropriate one to reflect upon the powerful example of passion, generosity, and inclusivity she provides.

Reverse of British Museum 2018,8050.36

All images of Venetia Newall’s egg collection © The Trustees of the British Museum. Shared here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) licence. You can explore the collection here

Read Newall’s An Egg at Easter (and other works) on the Internet Archive.

If you liked this post about one of my (many) British Museum rabbit holes, you might also like this post about discovering the collection of F Laura Cannan

British Museum 2018,8050.15. Thin strips of straw on dark blue ground. Collected by Venetia Newall in Vienna, Easter 1978.

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