Hannah Johnson

Bed Rug

1796
Wool, plain weave; with cut pile formed by wool yarns embroidered in looped running stitches
249.4 × 246.1 cm (98.2 × 96.9 in)

SEE IT IN PERSON

Not currently on view

In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026

View at artic.eduPlan a visit ↗

Discussion

FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG

It is not surprising that early American textiles reflect the strong influence of European, especially English, designs and techniques. Materials were scarce and making utilitarian objects such as bedcoverings depended entirely on raw products that could be raised by a family or community. Yet indigenous forms of American needlework did develop, as can be seen in this masterful bed rug. Although the coiling tendrils of its design are reminiscent of motifs that appear in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century English textiles, their application to a bedcovering and the technique of looped running stitches embroidered through a wool support fabric are typically American. The term rugge or rugg appears in colonial inventories, where it refers to a woven yardage fabric used to make bedcovers. Such pieces were unique to the Connecticut River Valley. The information provided by the needlework contributes to the rarity of this piece: the initials H. J. refer to its maker, Hannah Johnson, the daughter of Ebenezer and Anna Johnson. It is dated 1796 and carries the number 26, which indicates that Johnson was twenty-six years old when she made it.

Source ↗

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Sign in to join the discussion.

Community guidelines

More like this

PiecePieceCopeSpain — CopePanelTurkey, Bursa — PanelChasuble (Back)Italy — Chasuble (Back)PiecePieceCushion Cover (Made from Woman's Dress)England — Cushion Cover (Made from Woman's Dress)Altar FrontalItaly or France — Altar FrontalBedcoverUnited States, possibly Connecticut — BedcoverPanelItaly, Genoa — PanelPanelEngland — PanelCoverTurkey — CoverBurseFrance — Burse