The quilt revival

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The 1970s marked a quilt revival, thanks in part to the nostalgic interest in crafts generated by the American Bicentennial. Often cited as a major influence was a 1971 exhibit, “Abstract Design in American Quilts,” curated by Jonathan Holstein and Gail van der Hoof at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, in which vintage quilts, a few Amish-made, were displayed like modern art. “Art quilts” soon joined the quilter’s vocabulary, typified by work from Michael James, Jan Myers-Newbury, Nancy Crow, and others. These quilts, which escaped the practical constraints of quilts intended for use, were displayed in venues such as the biennial Quilt National exhibition in Athens, Ohio.

Bonnie Leman’s Quilter’s Newsletter Magazine, founded in 1969, was the first quilt-dominated magazine. Others soon followed, including Lady’s Circle Patchwork Quilts, Quilt World, and the American Quilter. The latter promotes the American Quilter’s Society, founded by William and Meredith Schroeder in 1984, with an annual contest and show in Paducah, Kentucky.

The International Quilt Festival, founded by Karey Bresenhan in 1974, holds an annual conference in Houston, Texas. Other groups include the American Quilt Study Group, National Quilting Association, Quilt Heritage Foundation, International Quilt Association, and Alliance for American Quilts. Many state and local guilds actively promote quilting for education and charitable purposes.

Museums such as the Smithsonian Institution, Metropolitan Museum of Art, and American Museum of Folk Art display quilts from their collections. Regional museums and collections include the American Textile History Museum and New England Quilt Museum, both in Lowell, Massachusetts; the Museum of the American Quilter, Paducah, Kentucky; the International Quilt Study Center, Lincoln, Nebraska; the Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum, Golden, Colorado; the San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles, San Jose, California; and the Latimer Quilt and Textile Center in Tillamook, Oregon.

Quilters have competed for recognition ever since the 19th-century county fair. National quilt contests of the 20th century, notably the 1933 World’s Fair quilt contest sponsored by Sears, Roebuck and Company and the 1977 Bicentennial contest sponsored by Good Housekeeping magazine, have contributed to interest in quilting and brought forward national teachers like Jinny Beyer.

By the 1980s timesaving tools and techniques, especially the rotary cutter and strip piecing, began changing quilting. Television personalities such as Georgia Bonesteel, along with the shows Simply Quilts and Quilt-in-a-Day, provided quilt history and instruction. Innovative techniques developed by art quilters such as Caryl Bryer Fallert as well as those specializing in more traditional work, such as Nancy Martin, Ami Simms, and Judy Martin, reached an international audience through books, conferences, and the Internet.

Interest in quilting is not confined to North America; Great Britain, France, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan have flourishing quilting communities. American quilts are collected and copied worldwide as folk art and textile art.

Cindy Joan Brick The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica