Quilts from three generations of African American makers in a remote Alabama community demonstrate great skill in deployment of form and colour and a strong collective aesthetic
Exposing secrets of the Israeli national security state
Each shop features the quilter’s story and their array of offerings, with prices on works that range from $27 to $5,500 per piece.
Gee's Bend Author Tinnie Pettway shares poems,Short stories and tips bits about Life in the Bend.
A crafting legacy that began 19th century Alabama, the quilts from Gee's Bend document a history of struggle, survival and miraculous making.
Loretta Bennett, along with Louisiana Bendolph, is among the younger generation of quilt makers whose work was included in the national touring exhibition Gee’s Bend: The Architecture of the Quilt. Bennett’s bold, colorful designs help move the Gee’s Bend legacy into the future. She was recently included in a two-person show alongside the works of Helen Frankenthaler; a true testament to the strength and brilliance of her compositions. The artist is represented by Greg Kucera Gallery in Seattle, Washington.
Pictures and details of The Gee’s Bend Quiltmakers at Alison Jacques Gallery, London, December 3, 2020 – April 25, 2021 – Contemporary art with installation views
Gee's Bend Quilts are unlikely modernist works of abstraction, created through folk traditions passed down from generations.
A new exhibition celebrates the remarkable legacy of the master makers from a tiny Alabama hamlet who found worldwide fame two decades ago
“We think of inheriting as land or something, not things that people teach you.” -Louisiana Pettway Bendolph, Gee’s Bend Quilt Artist The story of the Gee’s Bend…
Each shop features the quilter’s story and their array of offerings, with prices on works that range from $27 to $5,500 per piece.
Each shop features the quilter’s story and their array of offerings, with prices on works that range from $27 to $5,500 per piece.
Learn about the history of Gee's Bend from the Quilter's Collective Manager, Mary Ann Pettway.
Wow! Honestly, I thought if I know about Gee’s Bend, EVERYONE must know about Gee’s Bend! But not everyone does. So I’ll tell ya a little…. Annie Mae Young, born 1928. Strip…
Quilting with denim - tricks, tips and lots of quilt inspiration. This Gee's Bend inspired quilt can be made using this FREE half square triangle tutorial!
“The best of these designs are so eye-poppingly gorgeous that it’s hard to know how to begin to account for them. But then, good art can never be fully accounted for, just described…” Michael Kimmelman, New York Times, 2002 Brilliantly eccentric and ludicrously inventive, the multi-generational quilts emerging from Boykin, colloquially known as Gee’s Bend,...
When enslaved women from the rural, isolated community of Boykin, Alabama—better known as Gee’s Bend—began quilting in the 19th century, it arose from a physical need for warmth rather than a quest to reinvent an art form.
Greg Lauren partnered with 14 quiltmakers from Gee's Bend, Alabama to produce a collection that's now on view at Bergdorf Goodman's Men's Store.
Early on a Sunday morning now almost two weeks ago (but seems like yesterday!), Pete and i drove from Atlanta to Gee’s Bend, Alabama – a rural community on an oxbow in the Alabama River, about 30 miles southwest of Selma and the famous Edmund Pettus Bridge. Gee’s Bend is also known as Boykin, Alabama. The land stretches out far and wide in every direction. We turned off Route 5 and headed along County Road 29 for a ways... ...and then we could tell we were getting close because these colorful hand-painted murals of Gee's Bend quilts started popping up in people's yards. The gray of the day set the colors off so beautifully. We learned that these were built and hand painted by Reverend McCloud (himself a resident quilter) in 2006, when ten Gee’s Bend quilts were featured on U.S. postage stamps. There’s also a sign that harkens to the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s: Gee's Bend became an important part of the mid-1960s Freedom Quilting Bee, which grew out of the Civil Rights movement and was designed to boost family income and foster community development by selling crafts. When not sewing in their homes, many of the quilters can be found here at the Quilter's Collective... ...which is where we met with the gracious, talented, and infectiously upbeat Mary Ann Pettway, who heads the Gee’s Bend Quilters Collective. She learned to sew at a young age at her mother’s side. Here she is showing us a quilt she made using her favorite colors, red and black ... ...and another she made from scraps of old U.S. Postal Service shirts sent by a friend in California. Here's another quilt Mary Ann made using old denim bluejeans and corduroy pant legs... While quilting in Gee's Bend spans from slavery to today, it seems that it is not so much the longevity of the quilting tradition here, as it is the quilts themselves (most of them entirely handmade) that draw people to this remote place to learn more about the people who make them. The quilts' exuberant colors and convergent harmonies are like something out of a Matisse collage or Rothko painting. The people and the quilts are remarkable, and inseparable. Then Mary Ann pulled these out of a plastic bag she had carried in with her... WOW, huh? Look at all those beautiful blocks! They were all created and hand sewn by Mary Ann. She mentioned that she likes to sew these in the car on long rides … as a passenger. Yes, we were also relieved to hear she wasn't DWS (Driving While Sewing). I sure was surprised to see how small some of the pieces were. Look really carefully and you'll see what i mean! I asked Mary Ann if she ever has a quilt design in mind when she begins to sew. Her reply was that she does not. She sews when the spirit moves her and she picks colors she likes to see next to each other. Pete was quick to pull out his iphone to record a little of our chat-and-giggle... I know the quality is not so great and the sound is a little hard to hear, but i'm sure you caught the most important part...Mary Ann loves making quilts! She loves it so much she can't stop. I have a hunch that some of you might know that feeling too. Just a hunch. I could have listened to her stories all day. As it was, we sat together side-by-side for almost two hours...talking (and mostly laughing)... A terrific article in Smithsonian Magazine explains the background and how Gee’s Bend quilts gained international attention; and for a visual treat, check out Auburn University’s Gee’s Bend Quilts site. As it was Sunday, Mary Ann kindly invited us to her church, the Pleasant Grove Baptist Church in Gee’s Bend. It was photographed in the 1930s by Arthur Rothstein for the U.S. Resettlement Department and visited by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in January 1965. There were about 80 people of all ages in the church and another 20 in the choir. We will always remember the inspiring music and sermon we heard that day, and how welcomed we were by everyone. After church, we joined Mary Ann, Pastor Lockett, Reverend McCloud, and the Pleasant Grove community for their semi-annual fellowship dinner in the adjacent hall. We had a great time and made some good friends – many of whom had visited or once lived in our town, Bridgeport, Connecticut. Small world! On our way to catch the ferry from Gee’s Bend, MaryAnn took us to say a quick hello to her cousin and Gee’s Bend quilting legend, Mary Lee Bendolph. Even while feeling a bit unworthy as a novice quilter, i was so happy to be in the company of these special ladies. MaryAnn Pettway, me, and Mary Lee Bendolph at Mary Lee’s house One of the quilts Mary Lee created (an image of this particular quilt can be found here on the Auburn site) has a pretty funny story behind it. As explained on that site: In the early 1990s, a former Bend resident living in Bridgeport, Connecticut, sent some garments –double-knit leisure suits – to Gee's Bend. Mary Lee Bendolph remembers: "My sister-in-law's daughter sent those clothes down here and told me to give them away, but didn't nobody want them. That knit stuff, clothes from way back yonder, don't nobody wear no more, and the pants was all bellbottom. We ain't that out-of-style down here. I was going to take them to the Salvation Army but didn't have no way to get there, so I just made quilts out of them." Although Mary Lee has been recovering from a stroke, she was full of good cheer and so hospitable the day we met her. I came away deeply moved and humbled by all the goodness and talents in Gee’s Bend, despite the various challenges they face. If you’ve got some extra fabric — other than double-knit leisure suits! — or sewing materials looking for a good home, by all means keep these women in mind. Gee’s Bend Quilters Attn. MaryAnn Pettway 14570 County Rd 29 Boykin, AL 36723 As the evening ferry pulled away from the shores of Gee's Bend, we left with uplifted spirits after spending a day with our new friends. If you’ve got a chance to visit, go (and give everyone a big hug for me).