The high-contrast quilts you see here are just a few of the 651 works that were included in a 2011 exhibit of red and white quilts spanning three centuries at the American Folk Art Museum in NYC. Ever since the Whitney Museum of American Art held a quilt-focused art exhibit back in 1971, quilts have often hung in galleries and museums as artworks rather than folk crafts. For centuries, though, quilts had a much more utilitarian use—warmth. (Of course, their decorative designs added to the pleasure they gave.) Quilting has a long tradition in the United States, going back to colonial times. Quilts were created not only for bedding but also to commemorate special occasions, like a wedding or a new baby. Quilting bees brought out the whole community—including many men—to share the work.
Quilts as high art
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Embracing the cold
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Ready for takeoff
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May we have this dance?
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Arches National Park, Utah
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Why does this panda cub look so happy?
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The Cordillera de la Sal in the Cordillera Domeyko Range of Chile
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Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act marks 42 years
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Rooftops in the walled city of Urbino, Italy
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Nakupenda Beach Nature Reserve, Zanzibar, Tanzania
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Boxing Day in East Yorkshire, England
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Anybody out there?
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Honoring our fallen heroes
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The Wall for Peace
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The Sky Over Nine Columns in Venice, Italy
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Dusky eagle-owls, Pakistan
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Make your list and check it twice
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The mountain of 30,000 sakura
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Defying gravity on a swing ride
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Blackbird in Essex, England
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The tale of squirrels like Nutkin
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In the path of the pronghorn
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Salt of the earth
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A fair that s star-studded
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Edinburgh Castle, Scotland
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A towering view of the Pale Mountains
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Umschreibung by Olafur Eliasson in Munich
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Happy winter solstice!
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Sundance Film Festival opens in Park City
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Corjuem Fort in Goa, India
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Quebec City for Winter Carnival
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

