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Modernisms 1900-1980
Course: Modernisms 1900-1980 > Unit 9
Lesson 4: Postwar abstract artGee's bend, quilting over generations
Rita Mae Pettway's quilt, Housetop, showcases the creative brilliance of Gee's Bend quilters. Made from corduroy scraps in the 1970s, the quilt's rich hues and broken symmetry reflect African American vernacular culture. These quilts, often seen as talismans, blend aesthetics from West Africa, First Nations, and European American culture, embodying a spiritual layer and a sense of protection. Created by Smarthistory.
Video transcript
(happy music) - [Valerie] We're in the
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, looking at a quilt by Rita
Mae Pettway called Housetop. This is one of many fabulously
beautiful quilts made by the quilters in Alabama in Gee's Bend. - [Beth] One of the things that
I really felt very compelled by was the creative brilliance
of these women who have lived and worked in Gee's Bend for generations, and Pettway is a huge name in Gee's Bend. It is literally a Pettway
dynasty that have, over centuries, created such
a beautiful wealth of quilts. What I love about this
piece, and what I love about the grouping that
we were able to bring into the museum is that
they were all created roughly in the 1970s, and
what was very interesting about that is in early 1970s, they entered into a cooperative called the Freedom Quilting Bee Cooperative, which had a contract with
Sears, Roebuck, and Company, and they were charged with
creating bedding in corduroy, and oftentimes, they were
able to bring home scraps and leftover materials. And so there's something about the use of that corduroy that brings
such a deep, rich hue to bear. And she's using these strips,
this cast-off material, these scraps to create
something quite phenomenal. It is that richness that we see, and because this is a fractured medallion, the symmetry's been broken
up in terms of the color, and the alternating colors gives it a certain kind of rhythm. But it also, to me speaks
of thought processes, particularly among African
American vernacular culture, that evil travels in straight lines, and you disrupt that path, you disrupt that through disorientation. - [Valerie] And I think that
this is a very important idea that we're looking at household items made to keep people warm. - [Beth] Well, these quilts
were also used for the walls. They were used for the floor,
and they were used to protect from the elements, and in this, you also see that there's
this added spiritual layer. They're almost seen as
talismans when they're put on the body, that they protect from evil. - [Valerie] We're talking
about traditions that go back to the early 19th century
in this particular place, - [Beth] Generations of
enslaved African Americans, and what makes Gee's Bend
so important is we know that that was a very isolated community. We know that these
individuals, the Pettways, they have taken their surname
from the Pettway Plantation, so we know they were in a part of Alabama cut off because of a river. Because of that, we do
see this sort of enclave where an aesthetic, however fragmented from West Africa, is fused
with other aesthetics coming from First Nations, or from
European American culture, and how they manifest, and are preserved, and perpetuated from one
generation to the next. - [Valerie] Some of the
lines aren't straight where the pieces have been put together, so there is this feeling,
to me, of the people who sat and quilted this, and the
irregularity, to me, is part of its beauty. - [Beth] Absolutely, and one of the things that I've tried to explore is how spirituality is also somehow embedded, that there is a desire
to take the expressive, and the intangible, and
embed them in the static, and it is something about
imbuing those types of things that allows it to pulsate. In the most simplistic thing,
you find great complexity. And I think that is part
of that spiritual leaning that I find so fantastical
about this work. Here were individuals who did not have the academic training, but
who still knew color theory, who still knew how to create movement. - [Valerie] And when they
talk about their work, talk about that kind of improvising. - [Beth] There is an understanding
of colors being loud, or being quiet, or rushing toward you, or receding and being faint. If jazz is the original
American musical art form, what would be the equivalent to that? - [Valerie] Quilting? - [Beth] Quilting. (happy music)