Fabric of Their Lives
There's a new exhibition of works by the quilters of Gee's Bend, Alabama, whose lives have been transformed by worldwide acclaim for their artistry.
- By Amei Wallach
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2006, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Mary Lee Bendolph, 71, speaks in a husky voice and has a hearty, throaty laugh. At the opening of the new exhibition in Houston, she sported large rhinestone earrings and a chic black dress. For some years, kidney disease had slowed her quiltmaking, but the first exhibition, she says, "spunked me to go a little further, to try and make my quilts a little more updated." Her latest quilts fracture her backyard views and other local scenes the way Cubism fragmented the cafés and countryside of France. Her quilts share a gallery with those of her daughter-in-law, Louisiana Pettway Bendolph.
Louisiana now lives in Mobile, Alabama, but she remembers hot, endless days picking cotton as a child in the fields around Gee’s Bend. From age 6 to 16, she says, the only time she could go to school was when it rained, and the only play was softball and quiltmaking. Her mother, Rita Mae Pettway, invited her to the opening in Houston of the first quilt show. On the bus ride home, she says, she "had a kind of vision of quilts." She made drawings of what would become the quilts in the new exhibition, in which shapes seem to float and recede as if in three dimensions.
"Quilting helped redirect my life and put it back together," Louisiana says. "I worked at a fast-food place and a sewing factory, and when the sewing factory closed, I stayed home, being a housewife. You just want your kids to see you in a different light, as someone they can admire. Well, my children came into this museum, and I saw their faces."
To Louisiana, 46, quiltmaking is history and family. "We think of inheriting as land or something, not things that people teach you," she says. "We came from cotton fields, we came through hard times, and we look back and see what all these people before us have done. They brought us here, and to say thank you is not enough." Now her 11-year-old granddaughter has taken up quiltmaking; she, however, does her drawings on a computer.
In Gee's Bend not long ago, her great-grandmother Mary Lee Bendolph picked some pecans to make into candy to have on hand for the children when the only store in town is closed, which it often is. Then she soaked her feet. Sitting on her screened-in porch, she smiled. "I'm famous," she said. "And look how old I am." She laughed. "I enjoy it."
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Comments (2)
Your stories are remarkable. I was given several quilts from a lady who was 91 years old her aunts lived in alabama they made quilts of every kinds i dont know what kind they are, but i do know i cut one apart and it had pajamas in them it seem to me that who ever made it was very cold and needed to be warmer i still have them what left of that one and several more.
Posted by louise on August 6,2012 | 12:22 PM
annie mae young is my loving grandmother.she takes pride in all the quilts she has made...
Posted by jolee king jr on June 3,2008 | 07:51 PM
I just got back from the Tacoma Art Museum to see the Gee Bend quilts and still have etched on my mind the most striking art exhibit I have seen in years (from any museum, anywhere). The womanly art of quilting- that part that goes beyond the craft of stitching fabric together is newly defined by this collection and can be compared to nothing else. On the way out of town, I dropped in at the Washington State Historical Museum to see the "art quilt" exhibit there. I found myself disappointed as I immediately missed the uninhibited freedom and economy of the Gee' Bend quilts. To read their stories and soak in their art made this a day I will never forget. Julie Nelson Davis, Bellingham, WA
Posted by Julie Nelson Davis on December 5,2007 | 10:02 PM