african american quilting traditions
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African American Quilting Traditions. By Rebecca Schultz. Quilting Traditions. Quilting is a unique tradition because it has been developed as a union of different ethnic and cultural traditions. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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By Rebecca Schultz
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Quilting Traditions• Quilting is a unique tradition because it has
been developed as a union of different ethnic and cultural traditions.
• Quilting has come to symbolize the union of African and European traditions in a unique manner, as a union, rather than a separation, of two, often contrasting or forcibly separated cultures and traditions.
• Quilting has become a type of symbol used not only for individual artists and authors, but a symbol for a country.
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Quilting Themes Quilts and quilting are
used to convey certain themes of:
• Self expression• Union of opposite values
or people• The formation of close
bonds among women and kin, heritage,history
• Family• Comfort• Love• Commitment
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Loom House
• This is where quilts began.
• It is a loom house used by slaves on the Melrose Plantation.
• What do you think the inside looked like?
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Interior of a Loom House.
• This is the interior of a loom house on Melrose Plantation.
• Do you think this was hard work?
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Textiles
• Originally in Africa the textiles were made by men.
• Once slaves were brought to America, women took over the tradition.
• This example of men’s traditional weave uses strips of reed and fabric which is also used used in fabric quilting.
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Bright Colors and Large Shapes• Bright colors were used in
African quilts.• These colors helped
Africans be able to recognize warring tribes and hunting parties from far away.
• This textile tradition of using large shapes has carried on into quilts made today.
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Diamond Pattern
• Very prominent in African textile tradition in the use of the diamond pattern.
• The diamond is symbolic of the cycles of life. • Each point represents a stage in life: birth,
life, death, and rebirth. The circle shape is similarly representative of this cycle.
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Quilt with a Diamond Pattern
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Pattern Breaks
• The ability to recreate and change old patterns was especially important to many African tribes.
• A break in a pattern symbolized a rebirth in the ancestral power of the creator or wearer.
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Pattern Breaks• A break in a pattern
also helped keep evil spirits away.
• Evil is believed to travel in straight lines and a break in a pattern or line confuses the spirits and slows them down.
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Traditions
• Often the owner’s status was conveyed in the number of pattern changes or the cloth used.
• This tradition was especially important for royalty and priests -- it conveyed prestige, power, status, and wealth.
• The traditions of improvisation and multiple patterning also protect the quilter from anyone copying their quilts.
• These traditions allow for a strong sense of ownership and creativity.
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This is an example of using many patterns and materials in a quilt.
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Quilts
• Quilts were used to keep records of family traditions.
• They were used much like a “family album” that we would put together.
• Quilts were used to record family events such as….
• (CLICK AND FIND OUT)
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Events Recorded in Quilts
Births Marraiges Geographic Location
Quilts
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Family Album Quilt• The quilt on the right is
titled Black family Album (1854).
• Representative of her black family's traditions, heritage, and lineage, its creator literally pasted her family album onto a lasting fabric.
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Cultural Quilts
• On the left is a quilt made in 1938 that display's the same type of cultural information about the creator's family and plantation life.
• What do you think the quilt says about plantation life?
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Charms
• Charms are used in many African and African American religious societies.
• They are created by a priest or conjure woman for the specific needs of its user.
• Charms can heal or ward off evil spirits.
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Quilts to Ward off Evil Spirits
• This quilt has the African American Vodun dolls for safe guarding the for the user from evil spirits of a specific threat.
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Underground Railroad
• During slavery years, members of the Underground Railroad would use quilts to send messages.
• Log Cabin quilts made with black cloth were hung to mark a safe house of refuge.
• Some quilts marked escape routes out of a plantation or county.
• Others marked the stars that would act as a night-time map through the country to freedom.
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Log Cabin Quilt
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ConclusionAfrican American quilts symbolize much tradition and culture in each
patch that makes up such a masterpiece.
NOW IT IS TIME TO ….
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ReferencesAll text and graphics came from: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~UG97/quilt/atrads.html