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The Arts Intel Report

Fabric of a Nation: American Quilt Stories

Harriet Powers, Pictorial Quilt, 1895–98.

Feb 15 – Mar 12, 2023
2701 N Sepulveda Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90049, USA

Quilts and coverlets have always been a feature in folk art museums, but increasingly they’re the subject of exhibitions in mainstream museums. This show looks at the stories these patchwork pieces tell, and the ways they reflect American history. Works date back to the 1600s and come up to the present day. A special draw is Harriet Powers’s Pictorial quilt (1898), a loan from the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, where this exhibition originated. Powers was born a slave in Georgia, was freed at the end of the Civil War, and began making quilts while raising nine children. In her hands the quilt became a site of poetic transport, possessing the negative space, the homespun surrealism, of verse by Emily Dickinson. The storytelling that Powers pulls from patchwork and appliqué—captured in square chambers like the cinema to come—draws upon African and African-American influences; her sense of silhouette rivals any cutout by Matisse. Also among the works on view are Bisa Butler’s majestic portrait quilts, and an antique quilt by Sanford Biggers, Fool’s Gambit (2019), which he has reworked into a sculpture. —Laura Jacobs

Photo: © Museum of Fine Arts, Boston