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The women of Gee’s Bend, a small, remote, Black community in Alabama, have created hundreds of quilt masterpieces dating from the early twentieth century to the present. Resembling an inland island, Gee’s Bend is surrounded on three sides by the Alabama River. The some seven hundred or so inhabitants of this small, rural community are mostly descendants of slaves, and for generations they worked the fields belonging to the local Pettway plantation. Quiltmakers there have produced countless patchwork masterpieces beginning as far back as the mid-nineteenth century, with the oldest existing examples dating from the 1920s. Enlivened by a visual imagination that extends the expressive boundaries of the quilt genre, these astounding creations constitute a crucial chapter in the history of American art.

Annie E. Pettway. Courtesy Alison Jacques Gallery, London

Running from 3 December 2020 to 6 February 2021, London’s Alison Jacques Gallery presents the first solo exhibition in Europe devoted to three generations of women artists living in Gee’s Bend, now known as Boykin. The exhibition provides a survey of quilts spanning over 90 years from the 1930s through to 2013 with some of the artists still living and working in Boykin today. The exhibition is organised in partnership with the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, a non-profit organisation dedicated to documenting, preserving, and promoting the contributions of African American artists of the South, and the cultural traditions in which they are rooted.

Annie E. Pettway, ‘Housetop’ – nine-block variation, c. 1930s. Cotton. 195.6 x 180.3 cm, 77 x 71 ins. © Annie E. Pettway / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York and DACS, London

The remoteness of Boykin, and the tightly knit community within it, has created a unique environment for the women’s art community and their chosen language of quilting. The experimental processes and compositional language of these quilts has been passed through many generations of Gee’s Bend residents from grandmothers to mothers to daughters. The idea of handing down or passing on knowledge through generations of the same family is a key part of the artists’ work, and in the show, discover members of the same family’s work exhibited side by side. The familial lines of quilts illustrate a sense of community. Continuity is key with ideas passed on but uniquely interpreted within each generation. These quilts signify the artists’ personal pasts and hopes for the future, but also respect the culture from which they originated.

Stella Mae Pettway, Big Wheel, 1986. Double knit, cotton and polyester. 218.4 x 193 cm, 86 x 76 ins. © Stella Mae Pettway / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York and DACS, London

These quilted collages are uninhibited by the norms of fine or folk art, often guided by a personal vision. Within the colourful and multi-layered works on show, uncover different quilting vocabularies and approaches to form and construction. Their use of symbols, asymmetry and bright colours refer back to African textiles and create a distinctive visual language which also recalls Modernist painting. The artists refer to different types of quilting techniques, from Abstraction & Improvisation, Pattern & Geometry, Housetop & Bricklayer, Lazy Gal and Work Clothes. Audio of some of the songs sung passed down through the generations of artists in Boykin are included as a backdrop to the show. Like quiltmaking, singing was an emancipatory act and an essential form of self-expression that sustained nearly all of the women of Gee’s Bend. In fact, singing and quiltmaking often went together, an outpouring of haunting gospel harmonies and ecstatic, spontaneous prayers amidst the endless rhythms of stitching.

Loretta Pettway. Courtesy Alison Jacques Gallery, London

The Gee’s Bend quilts were not originally created as art works but out of necessity. The very culture that these women were raised in taught them that everything had a use. When the nights became cold each winter, the women would use scraps of fabric and stitch a quilt to put on the beds of their children. The inspiration for this approach to construction came from daily practicalities, such as managing housing insulation, the residents using layers of paper found in newspapers or magazines to protect their families from the cold. In addition to their functional use, the quilts are often hung vertically indoors and outdoors on gates and clothes lines. It was, and still is, common practice for the quilt makers to ‘air out’ their quilts every spring providing members of the community an opportunity to study other’s methods and designs for inspiration the following winter.

Loretta Pettway, Two-sided work-clothes quilt: Bars and blocks, c. 1960. Cotton, denim, twill, corduroy, wool blend. 210.8 x 180.3 cm, 83 x 71 ins. © Loretta Pettway / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York and DACS, London

The single road in and out of the neighbourhood was first paved in 1967, coinciding with the ferry service the community relied on, being suspended in an attempt by the nearby white community to stop the residents of Gee’s Bend registering to vote. During the Civil Rights Movement, the quilts from Gee’s Bend gained national recognition when the women formed the Freedom Quilting Bee collaborativeresulting in quilts being sold across the United States, which generated income returning to their community. In 1999, the Los Angeles Times featured Gee’s Bend artist Mary Lee Bendolph in the Pulitzer Prize-winning article Crossing Over, highlighting her and the community’s efforts to re-establish the ferry service across the Alabama River. In 2006, 39 years later, the ferry service was reinstated, with Mary Lee Bendolph now aged 85 years old, who exhibits a quilt from 1990 in this exhibition, still quilting today.

Rita Mae Pettway, ‘Pig in the pen’ – block style, 2019. Cotton / polyester blend. 210.8 x 210.8 cm, 83 x 83 ins. © Rita Mae Pettway / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York and DACS, London

The first major museum exhibition dedicated to The Quilts of Gee’s Bend was at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2002). In 2006, the publication, Gee ́s Bend: The Architecture of the Quilt premiered at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and that same year, the U.S. Postal Service issued ten commemorative stamps featuring images of Gee’s Bend quilts. More recently works were shown in History Refused to Die: Highlights from the Souls Grown Deep Foundation at the Metropolitan Museum, New York (2018). The quilts of Gee’s Bend are now in many prominent museum collections including Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia; Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, San Francisco; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; High Museum of Art, Atlanta and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.



Feature image: Essie Bendolph Pettway, Sally, 1998. Corduroy, denim, polyester. 233.7 x 233.7 cm, 92 x 92 ins. © Essie Bendolph Pettway / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York and DACS, London

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