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Untitled (Housetop Variation)

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@ Smithsonian American Art Museum

Unidentified (American)

Description

Improvisational quilts, or those with free-form patterns, are an old, ongoing tradition in African American quilting. They represent a practical need for warmth, but, in the early and mid-twentieth century, they also provided a rare splash of color in drab dwellings. By asserting personal style and the need to live with beautiful things, such quilts reveal "home-making" as a defiant, political act by people whose lives beyond the home were marked by oppression. The maker's identity has often been lost, but the material and aesthetic compositions depart radically from European American quilt patterns and color palettes. African American quilters improvised with available, worn, and patched-together materials to create great beauty from meager means.
Format:
Wool And Cotton
Rights:
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Corrine Riley and museum purchase through the Barbara Coffey Quilt Endowment and the Luisita L. and Franz H. Denghausen Endowment
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Record Contributed By

Smithsonian American Art Museum

Record Harvested From

Smithsonian Institution