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Quilt Treasures
2011
Editor(s): Michigan State University Museum
“Quilt Treasures are the special women and men who were key to the American quilt revival of the 1960s and 1970s, reawakening interest nationwide in the history, craft, and social and aesthetic value of quilts. They ensured the preservation and documentation of quilts through the state and regional quilt projects and they took quilting as a cultural expression to new heights. As creators, teachers, communicators, and links in a growing network, these ‘quilt treasures’ built an art form and an industry that today involves and touches millions of Americans. As these individuals began to retire from active involvement in the quilt world, an important piece of American social and cultural history was at risk of being lost.”
–Alliance for American Quilts co-founder Shelly Zegart, 2003
The Quilt Treasures Project is a collaborative effort between The Alliance for American Quilts, the Michigan State University Museum, and MATRIX: The Center for the Humane Arts, Letters and Social Sciences Online to document the stories of a limited number of notable individuals — quilt makers, designers, business people, collectors, scholars, publishers — who were instrumental in moving the 20th century quilt revival forward in some significant way. The quilts featured in this gallery are examples from the Quilt Index that were quilted, inspired, or collected by one of the Quilt Treasures.
Individuals currently documented or soon to be documented as Quilt Treasures include
• Virginia Avery
• Cuesta Benberry, noted African American quilt scholar
• Jinny Beyer, artist
• David and Patricia Crosby
• Joyce Gross, editor and publisher, The Quilt Journal (1977-1987)
• Jean Ray Laury
• Bonnie Leman, founder of Quilter's Newsletter Magazine
• Cy Nelson, collector and editor of quilt publications
• Yvonne Porcella
• Bets Ramsey, co-director of the Tennessee Quilt Survey
• Hystercine Rankin
• Mary Schafer
• Merry Silber
• Woodard and Greenstein
Selected Related Publications:
No Editor
2008
Bets Ramsey was interviewed in her Nashville, Tennessee home by Marsha MacDowell on January 25, 2008.
No Editor
2002
Cuesta Benberry was interviewed in her St. Louis, Missouri home by Justine Richardson and Merikay Waldvogel on July 2, 2002.
Michigan State University Museum
2008
Cuesta Benberry was one of the twentieth-century's pioneers of research on American quiltmaking and she was the pioneer of research on African American quiltmaking. This collection is housed in the Michigan State University Museum.
Quilt Treasures
2002
Virginia Avery was interviewed for Quilt Treasures in her home in Port Chester, NY on November 6, 2002, by Justine Richardson and Marsha MacDowell.