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Sunday, November 10, 2024 |
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BAMPFA to mount first major museum survey from the world's largest collection of African American quilts |
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Irene Bankhead, Untitled (Bars). Cotton, cotton/polyester blend; machine pieced, hand quilted, 96 x 85 in. (243.8 x 215.9 cm) OBJ2384 Bequest of the Eli Leon Living Trust, BAMPFA. Photo: Kevin Candland.
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BERKELEY, CALIF.- The Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA) is organizing an exhibition of more than one hundred quilts by approximately eighty artists, the most expansive presentation to date of a transformative bequest of African American quilts that the museum received in 2019. Opening in Berkeley next year, Routed West: Twentieth-Century African American Quilts in California is a groundbreaking historical survey of the relationship between quiltmaking traditions and the history of Black migration to California from the Southern United States. The exhibition highlights the ongoing work of an ambitious multi-year initiative that BAMPFA has undertaken to research, catalog, and conserve the nearly three thousand African American quilts and several hundred unattributed quilts in its care, which are believed to comprise the largest collection of its kind.
Routed West spans the history of the Second Great Migration, a period from roughly 1940 through 1970 when millions of African Americans emigrated from the American South in search of greater economic opportunities and freedom from the region's racial violence. Hundreds of thousands of these families settled in California, bringing with them quilts and quiltmaking traditions from the communities they had left behind. Approximately one fourth of the quilts in the exhibition were completed in the South prior to 1950; others were created in California during the postwar era, a period when many of these artists quietly revitalized the quilting practices that had been passed down through their families for decades. Taken together, the quilts in Routed West explore the mediums unique capacity for holding memory and ancestral knowledge in the context of movement and diaspora, while sustaining communal and spiritual ties across multiple generations of Black life.
To illuminate this underexplored history, the exhibition will draw exclusively from a bequest of quilts and related textile objects that BAMPFA received from the estate of Eli Leon, who passed away in 2018. A self-taught quilt scholar and collector, Leon spent more than thirty years assembling the worlds largest privately held collection of African American quilts, which includes works by lesser-known quiltmakers and those whom he championed for formal recognitionincluding National Heritage Fellows Gussie Wells and Laverne Brackens, along with Rosie Lee Tompkins, who was the subject of an internationally acclaimed retrospective that opened at BAMPFA in February 2020. BAMPFA learned only after Leons death that he had chosen to leave the entirety of his collection to the museum, a monumental bequest that now comprises nearly one fifth of BAMPFAs total art holdings. Since receiving this bequest, BAMPFA has embarked on a long-term project of cataloging, conserving, researching, and exhibiting these works, the first time in the collections history that it has received this level of institutional stewardship. As part of this ongoing commitment, BAMPFA established a grant-funded curatorial position in 2020 dedicated to this collection, appointing Dr. Elaine Yauan art historian working at the intersection of folk and modern art, who holds a PhD in History of Art from UC Berkeleyto lead this important work. In 2024, Dr. Yau was promoted to the full-time position of Associate Curator and Academic Liaison at BAMPFA.
As the curator of Routed West, Yau has conducted unprecedented research into the provenance of the quilts in the exhibition. Working with Curatorial Associate Matthew Miranda, Yau has been working to establish channels of communication with individual quilt artists and their surviving family members, in order to build a deeper understanding of the personal, familial, and communal histories that are embedded in these works. This ongoing research process is not only vital for advancing scholarship around these quilts, but also for honoring the artists who created them, almost all of whom are Black women whose contributions have been historically underrecognized within the canon of American art history.
Yau is also the editor of an exhibition catalog that will be published next spring in conjunction with the opening of Routed West, the first scholarly publication dedicated to African American quilting practices in California. Co-published by DAP and Del Monico, this fully illustrated catalog features essays by Yau and Wendy Thompson that, together, situate individual quilt stories within the larger history of Black Life in the Bay Area; personal essays by Daphne Brooks and artists Basil Kincaid and Adia Millett on the contemporary relevance of African American quilts; and unpublished essays by Eli Leon that give personal insight into his collecting practices. In a transcribed roundtable conversation, Sharbreon Plummer, Carolyn Mazloomi, A'donna Richardson, and Bridget R. Cooks discuss the historical inequities of quilt collecting and how art museums can redress these exclusions in the future.
BAMPFA plans to offer a robust slate of public programs in conjunction with Routed West, including panel discussions with contemporary quilters and quilt historians, performances and film screenings, and other programs in partnership with the newly founded African American Quilt Documentation Study Group. A full roster of programs will be announced later this year, along with information about the exhibitions anticipated national tour. Visit bampfa.org for the latest updates.
With Routed West, were activating the extraordinary collection of African American quilts at BAMPFA to honor the stories of the individuals and communities whose vibrant artistic traditions are indispensable tobut too often omitted fromthe larger narrative of American art history, and of our own history here in California, said Yau. These magnificent quilts carry within them stories of resilience, creativity, self-determination, and ingenuitynarratives that not only define a distinctive period of artistic production, but also inform a deeper understanding of the intergenerational ties that continue to sustain Black life in the United States.
We are excited to build on the great success of the Rosie Lee Tompkins exhibition a few years ago by presenting more of this unique quilt collection for our community to enjoy, said BAMPFAs Executive Director Julie Rodrigues Widholm. Quilts play a profound role in so many families lives and we look forward to connecting people through this important art form.
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