SHARON SPRINGS — If you haven't seen the quilts of Gee's Bend, you're missing out on some seriously incredible art! These masterpieces come from a small, rural community in Alabama where African American women have been creating stunning quilts for generations.
The story dates back to 1816, when Joseph Gee established a cotton plantation. The Sharon Historical Society is hosting the talk by Sharon Aernecke Aitchison as part of its lecture series. The people living in Gee's Bend today are descendants of the enslaved workers from that plantation. Being so isolated allowed this community to develop its own amazing artistic style over the years.
Here's what makes these quilts so special: the women didn't have money for fancy fabrics, so they got creative with whatever they had lying around—old clothes, worn-out towels, fabric scraps, you name it. Instead of seeing this as a limitation, they turned it into their superpower.
These aren't your grandmother's traditional quilts with perfect patterns. The Gee's Bend quilts are wild and spontaneous, with bold shapes and colors that seem to dance across the fabric. They break all the rules of traditional quilting, and that's exactly what makes them so powerful.
What started as practical bedding to keep families warm has now become world-famous art. These quilts hang in major museums around the globe, bringing well-deserved recognition and economic opportunities to the community that created them.
Register here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-quilts-and-quilters-of-gees-bend-registration-1689269102359
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