The Smithsonian’s Anacostia Community Museum Presents Powerful Exhibitions featuring South African and US Women Artists through Sept. 21, 2014
“Ubuhle Women…recognizes the powerful cultural currents and back stories from the artists as central to their every stitch. …Art is often what happens when our life experiences become too big for our words,” notes Lonnae O’Neal, Washington Post, 12/27/13
Among the many works on display featuring themes significant to the artists’ lives—cattle, gardens, the passing of loved ones—the massive piece “The African Crucifixion” composed of seven (7) panels and commissioned for the Cathedral of the Holy Nativity, the Anglican cathedral in Pietermaritzburg, is a major testament to the true artistry of the work.
Reaching back into time and featuring pieces from the museum’s permanent collection is “Home Sewn: Quilts from the Lower Mississippi Valley” curated by Jasmine A. Utsey. The four quilts on display are those created by two sisters Annie Dennis (1904–1997) and Emma Russell (1909–2004) and a friend Effie Bates Copper who were trained in quilt making at the turn of the past century in an African American rural Mississippi community. The quilts represent classic American quilt patterns and techniques passed down through five generations. The first of several future exhibitions drawn from the museum’s legacy collections, “Home Sewn” examines the generational, social and economic fabric of an African American quilting community in rural Mississippi. “Home Sewn” includes fieldwork and audio interviews with present-day African American women quilters giving voice to the continuing tradition of quilting in these communities.
Support for public programming for “Ubuhle Women: Beadwork and the Art of Independence” was made possible in part by DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities. Support for the acquisition of the quilts featured in “Home Sewn” was made possible by a gift from Joseph Horning Jr. and Lynne Horning.
Established in 1967, the Smithsonian’s Anacostia Community Museum focuses on examining the impact of contemporary social issues on urban communities. For more information, call (202) 633-4820; for tours, call (202) 633-4844. Website: anacostia.si.edu.
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