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The quilts of Gee's bend presented in Armenia

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  • The quilts of Gee's bend presented in Armenia

    ArmenPress
    March 21 2005

    THE QUILTS OF GEE'S BEND PRESENTED IN ARMENIA

    YEREVAN, MARCH 19, ARMENPRESS: The U.S. Embassy in Armenia
    presented last Friday "The Quilts of Gee's Bend" exhibition of twelve
    quilts created by a community of African-American women in Gee's
    Bend, Alabama. This exhibition has been shown with international
    acclaim at major art museums across the United States, and is
    appearing overseas for the first time. Ambassador John Evans
    officially opened the exhibition at the Academia Gallery in Yerevan.
    Gee's Bend is a small rural community located in southwest Alabama
    on a sliver of land five miles long and eight miles wide, an island
    surrounded by a bend in the Alabama River. Gee's Bend was the site of
    cotton plantations, owned by the families of Joseph Gee and Mark
    Pettway, and were worked by slave labor. Most of the approximately
    750 people who live in Gee's Bend today are descendants of slaves.
    After the Civil War, when slavery was abolished, the freed slaves
    rented the land from the Pettways, took their family name, and
    founded an all-black community that was very isolated from the
    surrounding world.
    Throughout American history, quilting has provided generations of
    women with an outlet to express their creativity and skill. A quilt
    is a layered blanket, with a front and a back, and stuffing in the
    middle for extra warmth. Though traditions of quilting span many
    centuries, civilizations and cultures, "pieced" quilts, which have
    tops decorated with strips of cloth in a range of colors and fabrics,
    originated in colonial America.
    In 2002, the first exhibition of these quilt masterpieces was
    organized at the Museum of Fine Arts, Atlanta. The "Quilts of Gee's
    Bend" also traveled to the Whitney Museum of American Art in New
    York, as well as other museums in a twelve-city U.S. tour. The
    exhibition achieved tremendous international acclaim. Hundreds of
    print and broadcast media organizations that have celebrated the
    quilts and the history of Gee's Bend. Art critics worldwide have
    compared the quilts to the works Henri Matisse and Paul Klee.
    In 2003, with assistance from Tinwood organizations, all the
    living quilters of Gee's Bend - more than fifty women - founded the
    Gee's Bend Quilters Collective to exhibit, market and sell the quilts
    being produced by the women of the Bend. In 2005 the Quilts of Gee's
    Bend will travel overseas for the first time, to be exhibited in
    Armenia, Georgia, and Kazakhstan.
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