
Do you know who knitted this?
It was made by a fan of prominent Australian arts figure Robyn Archer, incorporating Archer's image from the cover of the album A Star is Torn.
However, Archer doesn't know the fan's name.
The cardigan was one of 18 items, spanning two decades (1993-2003) of her career, donated by Archer to the National Museum of Australia.
While a call-out might be posted on the museum's website, someone might already know who knitted it.
Also included was what Archer called "a small part of the T-shirt collection" she decided to donate after going through a storage locker.
While most of the 18 items she donated are T-shirts, they are more than mere merchandise and mementos.
Archer, an internationally successful performer, writer, producer, artistic director and public arts advocate, has been a major part of Australia's cultural life since the 1970s and the collection represents just some of her accomplishments.
The T-shirts span 20 years, from a 1993 Reclaim the Night (angel) T-shirt to a 2013 Canberra 100 T-shirt with rainbow - all from events in which Archer played a key role.
She was, for example, the program director for the Canberra centenary, curating a calendar of events and overseeing 12 months of celebrations.
Also included were a T-shirt and mug from the 1995 National Festival of Australian Theatre - also held in Canberra - as well as T-shirts from the Melbourne International Arts Festival and the Adelaide Festival, all from years in which she was artistic director, and a tote bag from the 2011 Fifth World Summit on Arts and Culture (Melbourne).
A Wonder Woman jumper knitted by a fan was previously displayed in the Eternity gallery at the National Museum of Australia and has now returned there.
Archer had these among many other items in storage in Adelaide and offered them, pre-pandemic, to the National Museum of Australia.
Curator Craig Middleton went to Adelaide in 2019 to examine what Archer had. Another curator, Lily Withycombe, worked with Middleton on assembling the collection, and said that as well as providing reminders of Archer's artistic career the items also highlighted her activism.
Withycombe noted the T-shirt from the 1994 Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras ABC broadcast T-shirt. Archer hosted with playwright Nick Enright that year, the first time the Mardi Gras was broadcast live.
While the shirt was unassuming, with a simple ABC TV crew logo, Withycombe said, "The story it tells is so powerful."
"We are thrilled to welcome these personal mementos to the National Historical Collection. They will help us tell the rich stories of theatre and festival culture in Australia and the role of women in the arts," she said.
Archer, now in lockdown in Melbourne, said she, like many in the arts, had her career disrupted by the pandemic, with performances postponed multiple times and was frustrated by the uncertainty,
But, she said, after a Zoom meeting of the European Festival Association and hearing some terrible stories, "I understood how very fortunate we are, no matter how grim our circumstances."