|

"A Feast for the
Eyes, At Offices in Midtown"

November 15, 2001
By Deborah Baldwin
The lobbies of three soaring office buildings in Midtown will
be hung with quilts on Nov. 29, in a free exhibition for passers-by
who think to duck in. No longer a quaint domestic practice involving
the recycling of fabric scraps, quilting is a $2 billion a year
industry, said Shelly Zegart of the Alliance for American Quilts,
and an art form that "holds the memory of women in this country."
The quilts are contemporary and classic. The buildings, owned
by the Durst Organization, are at 1155 Avenue of the Americas,
1133 Avenue of the Americas and 4 Times Square. The eyeful comes
down on Jan. 31.
top of page
A
National Endowment for the Humanities Grant Supports The Quilt Index
Pilot Project
October 2001
With the support of a The National Endowment for the Humanities
grant of $200,000, Matrix: The Center for Humane Arts and Letters
On Line based at Michigan State University, will begin working
on a pilot project for the Index with four state quilt projects
to gather quilt records and documentation into The Quilt Index,.
The pilot projects are The Illinois State Museum, The Kentucky
Quilt Project/University of Louisville Archives and Records Center,
the Michigan Quilt Project/Michigan State University Museum, and
The Quilts of Tennessee/Tennessee State Library. Matrix will digitize
a portion of the extensive records of these state projects as
part of the Index's development and initial offerings.
Alliance co-president Shelly Zegart commented, "The Quilt
Index has long been a dream of many who study quilts and work
to preserve their history. For the first time, anyone with access
to the Internet will be able to search a vast database of quilt
images and information." Professor Mark Kornbluh, Executive
Director of MATRIX said, "We are so pleased to be working
with The Alliance and its partners to develop and host The Quilt
Index; it will provide unprecedented access to previously unpublished
documentation on American quilts and quilt making; and will be
a rich resource for students, teachers, scholars, quilt makers,
and the general public."
Another way the Alliance is offering access to information is
through H-Quilts. H-Quilts is a moderated internet discussion
forum, hosted by H-Net at Michigan State University, whose purpose
is to provide an exchange of information for individuals around
the world engaged in quilting research and documentation.
The future is bright for quilts as The Alliance and its partners
sew together a rich tapestry that will inform and excite us all
about quilts for many years to come.
top of page
The Alliance
for American Quilts: Partnerships Launching Quilts Onto Center Stage
October 2001
In this age of technology, it is amazing that quilts and quiltmaking
are still a vital part of the lives of so many people. An estimated
20 million contemporary quiltmakers continue to create treasures
that connect us to both our past and our future. Quilts are loving
records of family occasions, holders of memories, statements of
independence, and reflections of life in many eras. They are also
works of art enjoyed for their vibrancy of color and sophistication
of design. We have come to recognize that the artists that created
these pieces have given us incomparable insights into society
and culture throughout American history. Unfortunately, the connection
to the makers of many wonderful quilts has often been lost. 
A group of committed scholars, collectors, quiltmakers and historians
have vowed that won't happen again. The age of technology has
embraced the tradition of quilts and the future is bright for
both. The Alliance for
American Quilts is committed to putting quilts and quiltmakers
on center stage. The process for preserving the legacy of quilts
embraced by The Alliance is different than anything else in quilt
history and it is moving forward at a remarkable pace.
top of page
"National
Alliance Makes Progress"
Quilters' Newsletter Magazine
October 2001
By Lois Marilyn Verma
Those who appreciate the importance of preserving, studying,
and sharing quilts have new reason to be cheered by two recent
successes of The Alliance for American Quilts.
In her Needle Notes column in the June 2001 issue of QNM,
Mary Leman Austin briefly reviewed the goals and aspirations of
the non-profit Alliance. At the time of that writing, the group
was negotiating with the University of Delaware and its Center
for American Material Culture Studies to create the first
regional Center for The Quilt.
Shelly Zegart, copresident of The Alliance, now says that the
talks were successful. Under the agreement reached, CAMCS,
which played a leading role in developing and implementing one
of The Alliance's documentation projects, will work through the
regional Center for The Quilt to coordinate the Save
Our Stories project nationally. The Center, with CAMCS'
assistance, also will work on other projects within a six-state
Mid-Atlantic region, including helping those states to incorporate
their quilt project information into an online resource, The
Quilt Index. These states will also be aided with training
of local researchers to identify and rescue quilt-related artifacts
and ephemera for preservation.
Shelly says that The Alliance hopes to complete discussions soon
to establish additional regional sites at Michigan
State University and the University of Texas.
In a second major development, The National Endowment for the
Humanities has give a $200,000 grant to Michigan State University
to launch The Quilt Index,
a comprehensive online research tool providing public access to
information about quilts and quiltmakers from around the county.
The project was conceived and developed by The Alliance and implemented
in partnership with MATRIX:
The Center for Humane Arts and Letters Online and Michigan
State University Museum. Pilot sites for digitizing and uploading
their records include the Illinois State Museum, the Kentucky
Quilt Project/ University of Louisville Archives and Records Center,
the Michigan Quilt Project/ Michigan State Museum, and the Quilts
of Tennessee/ Tennessee State Library. With the grant money, The
Alliance hopes to have the project up and running in the first
half of 2002.
For more information about the group and its goals, visit its
website at www.centerforthequilt.org
or email info@centerforthequilt.org.
top of page
The
Alliance for American Quilts: A Catalyst for Creative Partnerships
September 6, 2001
To achieve its goals, The
Alliance for American Quilts, a not-for-profit 501 c3 organization,
plays a unique role as a catalyst bringing together institutions
and individuals from creative, scholarly, and business aspects
of quilts to advance the recognition of quilts in American culture.
A board of more than twenty men and women from a variety of academic
and business backgrounds has worked since 1993 to achieve this
objective. Through the development of unique creative projects
and partnerships with universities and museums around the country,
using state of the art technology, The Alliance is attempting
to create an accessible, comprehensive record and interpretation
of the stories, images and ephemera of American quilts and quilters.
top of page
The
Center for the Quilt Online: America's Quilt Home on the Internet
August 5, 2001
The key to coordinating and bringing forward the work of the
partners is that The Alliance is creating a virtual quilt center,
which will be accessible and user friendly for the research savvy
scholar as well as the passionately interested but novice collector
and everyone in between. The Center for the Quilt Online, (www.quiltcenter.org)
is America's Quilt Home on the Internet. This virtual resource
center is the first stop on the road for information about what's
happening in quilt documentation, preservation and interpretation.
The
University of Delaware Becomes First Regional Center, Will Shepherd
Alliance Projects for the Mid-Atlantic Region
June 12, 2001
The Alliance is in the process of developing a series of Regional
Centers for the Quilt under the Alliance umbrella around the
country whose work will be instrumental in moving Alliance objectives
forward. The Alliance's first Regional Center is at The
University of Delaware's Center for American Material Culture
Studies (CAMCS). CAMCS,
an interdisciplinary and collaborative venture dedicated to the
documentation, preservation, interpretation, and exhibition of
all aspects of American material culture, has played a leading
role in developing and implementing nationally a key Alliance
project: The Quilters' S.OS - Save our Stories (QSOS). The QSOS
project is collecting the culture of quilting today and has
developed an easy-to-duplicate model that allows local quilt guilds
and others to record the wonderful, personal stories of today's
quilt makers. These stories provide a window to current American
quiltmaking with information related in the most personal and
engaging terms. The oral histories and a photograph of the quilt
brought by the maker to the interview are touchstones and provide
the catalyst for sharing memories and wisdom. Today a manual
to do your own QSOS
project is available to download from the site and you can
also can visit the largest repository of interviews with quiltmakers
on the internet at http://www.centerforthequilt.org.
Click on Quilters'
S.O.S. - Save Our Stories and begin reading their stories
or downloading the manual.
The Delaware Center will also work with The Alliance on other
projects within a six-state Mid-Atlantic region, including the
Alliance's Boxes
Under the Bed Project. Most quiltmakers would not refer to
the storage box under their bed stuffed to over-flowing with fabric,
patterns, letters, articles, and notes as an "archive"
of quilting information. But for historians it is an archeological
dig, a source of valuable history and culture. "Boxes"
trains local researchers to identify and rescue quilt-related
artifacts and ephemera in need of preservation. Each Regional
Center will serve as a regional repository for quilt documentation
that results from Boxes and other projects.
Professor Bernard Herman,
Director of the Center for American Material Culture Studies,
is enthusiastic about the Delaware projects and refers to the
quilt-related Internet sites as 'an index of ideas.' Dr. Herman
said, "The power of quilts in American culture is scarcely
understood. We are excited by the prospect of working in partnership
with The Alliance to bring the stories of quilts, quiltmakers,
and quilting to the fore."
top of page
Michigan
State University Regional Center Provides National Coordination
for The Alliance's Quilt Index Project
June 4, 2001
Michigan State University recently cemented their relationship
with The Alliance by becoming the second Regional Center for the
Quilt. The Great Lakes
Quilt Center (GLQC) at the Michigan State University Museum
will play a leading role in developing and implementing The Quilt
Index, a key Alliance project. They will continue to provide
national coordination for Index expansion. This Regional Center
for The Quilt will also take on the role of national coordinator
of another important Alliance project, Quilt
Treasures. It will record and protect the legacy of nationally
recognized, 20th century, master quiltmakers and scholars of quilting
through a planned series of interactive, multi-media, oral histories,
also for distribution through the Internet. GLQC at the Michigan
State University Museum has a long standing interest in and commitment
to documentation, preservation, and presentation of quilting history
with a particular focus on Michigan and the Great Lakes.
The Quilt
Index is a project conceived and developed by The Alliance
for American Quilts and implemented in partnership with MATRIX:
The Center for Humane Arts and Letters Online based at Michigan
State University.
The Quilt
Index is a comprehensive on-line tool featuring information
about quilts in both public and private collections. State and
regional quilt projects will gain new importance and permanency
with the Quilt Index as it brings together all the previously
scattered and difficult to access documentation and images into
one site.
Both private and public collections, as well as bibliographies
of secondary materials and finding aids will also be available
through the Index's site on the World Wide Web (http://www.quiltindex.org).(www.quiltcenter.org)
Hundreds of thousands of quilts have been documented around the
country and now we must begin the process of collecting and, most
importantly, interpreting that data.
top of page
"Piecing Together
the Past"
University of Delaware Messenger
Volume 10, Number 4/2001
By Cornelia Weil
The College of Arts and Science is now home to the nation's
first regional Center for the Quilt, designed to document, preserve
and share the history and stories of quilts and quilt makers.
Formed in cooperation with The Alliance for American Quilts,
the quilt center is part of the College's Center for American
Material Culture Studies.
"The power of quilts in American culture is scarcely understood,"
Bernard Herman, Edward F. and Elizabeth Goodman Professor of
Art History and director of the material culture center, says.
"We are excited by the prospect of working in partnership
with The Alliance to bring the stories of quilts, quilters,
and quilting to the fore."
Staff at the Center for the Quilt will participate in a number
of projects, including the region's first Boxes Under the Bed
project, in which local researchers will identify and rescue
such quilting artifacts as templates, paper piecing patterns,
pin cushions, show programs and other quilt ephemera "that
got lost over time," Herman says.
He notes that the Center for American Material Culture Studies
already has played a role in developing and implementing a key
alliance project, the Quilters Saver Our Stories project, or
QSOS. In this project an easy-to- duplicate methodology allows
local quilt guilds and other students of quilts to record oral
histories of quilt makers. These oral histories with photographs
now are available on the web at [http://www.centerforthequilt.org].
The regional Center for the Quilt at UD will continue to coordinate
the collection of oral histories nationally while working with
five other mid-Atlantic states to incorporate their state quilt
project information in a newly developing online resource, The
Quilt Index.
The regional center also will serve as a repository for quilt
documentation that results from Boxes Under the Bed and other
projects. Herman says antique quilts will not be stored at the
University but their history and role in American life will
be preserved.
The Center for American Material Culture Studies is an interdisciplinary
and collaborative venture dedicated to the documentation, preservation,
interpretation and exhibition of all aspects of American material
cultures.
It "promotes learning from and teaching about all the
things people make and the ways people act upon the physical
and visible world," Herman says. It encompasses the fields
of art history, decorative arts, anthropology, history, visual
communications, early American culture, consumer studies, and
museum studies. An undergraduate minor in American material
culture studies is offered.
Formed in 1993 The Alliance for American Quilts works to document
the nation's quilt heritage in partnership with such institutions
as the American Folklife Center of the Library of Congress,
Michigan State University Museum, MATRIX: The Center for Humane
Arts and Letters Online at Michigan State University, the Illinois
State Museum, the University of Texas Center for American History,
the University of Louisville Archives and Records Center, and
the University of Nebraska International Quilt Study Center.
top of page
|