WILLIAMSBURG, VA.- Visitors to the
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum, one of the two expanded Art Museums of Colonial Williamsburg in Williamsburg, Virginia, will experience two new textile exhibitions: The Art of the Quilter opened on July 3 in the Foster and Muriel McCarl Gallery and Navajo Weavings: Adapting Tradition will open in the Mary B. and William Lehman Guyton Gallery in early August. These exhibitions are certain to be popular with museum goers as exhibitions displaying Colonial Williamsburgs renowned quilt collection have always been favorites of Art Museums guests, and Navajo Weavings: Tradition and Trade, the first exhibition at Colonial Williamsburg on loan from the collection of American folk art enthusiasts Pat and Rex Lucke, has been embraced by visitors since it opened in 2018.
Colonial Williamsburgs curators have worked diligently over the last twenty years to ensure that our collections represent the diversity of the American people, said Ronald L. Hurst, the institutions Carlisle H. Humelsine Chief Curator and vice president for museums, preservation, and historic resources. That critical work is ongoing, and these two exhibitions are clear evidence of our determination to use remarkable objects in telling a more complete and fulsome story.
The Art of the Quilter will delight quilt aficionados new and old. A three-year exhibition that will rotate a selection of bed quilts from the early nineteenth-century to present day, it will feature twelve examples each year from Colonial Williamsburgs superlative collection. Most of the quilts to be on display have never been shown before and many are recent acquisitions. The quilts tell stories about people from Americas past and the societies in which they lived; some bedcovers in the exhibition recalled milestone events in the lives of the makers, such as marriages, births or deaths. Others, such as album quilts, were created as reminders of friends and family left behind after a move that documented an increasingly mobile society in the nineteenth century as people moved westward to new lands and opportunities. Further stories are expressed through the motifs on the bedcovers. These extraordinary examples of handwork also demonstrate Americas multicultural society and include objects from the Anglo-American, African American, German, Amish, and Mennonite communities. The Art of the Quilter will remain on view through July 2024.
We are literally covering America with this exhibition! said Kimberly Smith Ivey, Colonial Williamsburgs senior curator of textiles. The bed quilts display a variety of techniques, colors and materials and demonstrate the diversity of American society.
Among the featured quilts to be seen are a pieced honeycomb quilt made of plain and printed cottons by Sarah Winifred Cobb (1842-1917) and Rachel, ca. 1850. This pieced quilt in a pattern often referred to as Grandmothers Flower Garden is the product of both White and Black hands. A hand-written label once attached to the quilt reveals that eight-year-old Sarah Winifred Cobb, under the direction of the enslaved Rachel, pieced the quilt top. Apparently, young Sarah was much devoted to Rachel who presided over the nursery for two generations at the family home Cobb Hill in Richmond, Kentucky. Although Sarah and her family are well identified, nothing more is known about Rachel, not even her surname.
Another highlight of The Art of the Quilter is a show quilt made of silks with silk embroidery thread, attributed to Jane Ault and probably made in Pennsylvania or Ohio, ca. 1900. Constructed of rich-colored silk solids, plaids, textured weaves, and velvets, this small throw has the additional embellishment of feather stitches. Quiltmakers in the late nineteenth century often used silks edged with fancy stitches to create wildly asymmetrical pieced crazy quilts. In this example, the design is more organized and symmetrical than that of crazy quilts; it consists of 323 pieced blocks of a repeating pattern of scalloped squares on point within a square. The last owner recalls that the quilt was given to her mother by her great-aunt, Jane Ault.
Due to the popularity of Navajo Weavings: Tradition and Trade, the first Native American textiles exhibition at the Art Museums, the Luckes have generously loaned six more weavings to be shown in a new exhibition, Navajo Weavings: Adapting Tradition, none of which have been displayed at Colonial Williamsburg before. This exhibition will remain on view through December 2022. A longstanding cultural and artistic tradition passed down for generations, anonymous Navajo women created brilliantly colored, boldly designed pictorial blankets and rugs on hand looms. They adapted and modified their weavings from the world around them, creating an art form that is uniquely theirs and providing insight into the Navajo culture at the end of the 19th century. Through the woven motifs of these textiles, museum guests can learn what was important to the makers among the Diné (the term the Navajo use to refer to themselves meaning the People) and gain a sense of their aspirations.
The earliest of Navajo weavings were blankets to be worn, known as chief blankets, made with a simple, horizontally striped and banded design and format. A highlight of Navajo Weavings: Adapting Tradition is an extremely rare Classic Period chiefs blanket. While it remains difficult to closely date objects such as this, as the techniques, materials and design was consistent across the Navajo lands for many years, it is believed that this example was made between 1840 and 1860. Its earliest provenance dates to a Ute (Chief Ouray) who obtained the blanket from the Governor of Pueblo de Taos during the 1870s. Because these blankets were utilitarian, many did not survive; it is believed that only approximately 50 to 60 of the early classic Ute design blankets exist and many are in museums. This piece is woven from single-ply, handspun Churro wool; its white and brown colors are natural and the blue is from an indigo dye.
The six Navajo weavings spanning about one hundred years highlight how the highly skilled Navajo weavers adapted and modified their traditional textiles from the world around them to meet the demands of a modern market and trade. With bold designs and brilliant colors, simple everyday objects like trains, livestock, and soda bottles were transformed into works of woven art, and today tell a compelling story of adaptation, survival, and change by the Navajo People, said Ms. Ivey.
Although the American flag was favored by customers to whom the Diné sold their handwork, it rarely appears as a true rendering on Navajo weavings. As flags were displayed on government buildings, both the buildings themselves as well as the flags became symbolic of U.S. power and authority on Navajo land. The weavers, therefore, would have adapted the flag to suit their needs, sometimes altering the rectangular shape, changing the number of stars or substituting them with flowers or anchors to create an entirely different motif. Another of the weavings to be featured in this exhibition is American Flag made between 1900 and 1910 of Germantown yarns, aniline dye, and natural white wool. The high-quality woolen yarn imported by railroad from Germantown, Pennsylvania, for use in Navajo weavings was commercially spun and dyed in bright colors with synthetic dyes. Because of the cost, traders supplied the Germantown yarn to the most skilled and talented weavers resulting in some very remarkable weavings.