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Great Lakes African American Quilters’ Network 2023 Quilt Documentation Day

Livonia; Michigan; United States

GLAAQN 2023 Quilt Documentation Day
The 2023 Great Lakes African American Quilters’ Network (GLAAQN) Quilt Documentation Day took place at the Livonia Civic Park Senior Center on Saturday, October 14th, 2023. This was the first collaborative quilt documentation day of its kind between the GLAAQN and the Quilt Index’s Black Diaspora Quilt History Project. The event was open to all GLAAQN members who desired to document, photograph, and share information about quilts they have made or collected over time. Each quiltmaker was invited to bring up to 5 quilts to be documented and photographed at the event. Quiltmakers were also invited to have professional artist portraits taken during the event.

The event was run by GLAAQN volunteers, with the assistance of Dr. Liv Furman and Dr. Marsha MacDowell. Volunteers attended a virtual training session with Dr. Furman on Zoom prior to the event to unpack Quilt Documentation Day logistics and concerns. Mark Harris served as the photographer for the event.
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Left: Cassandra R. Johnson Harris. Right: Linda Thomas. Photographer: Liv Furman.)

The event on October 14th kicked off with a group grounding conversation. The group began by gathering in a large circle and discussing the context and purpose of the event. Those present spoke of the ways the event would enable them to document a significant amount of personal, familial, and communal histories, particularly the histories and textile legacies of Black women quiltmakers. Together, they spoke the names of quiltmakers who inspired and taught them to quilt. They spoke the names of mothers, grandmothers, friends, and sisters. The full day of quilt documentation embodied and celebrated the legacies of those named and the many quiltmakers in attendance.

Altogether, 82 quilts by 20 different artists were documented at the event. Following the event, Quilt Index Associate Director, Beth Donaldson, added the data and made Quilt Pages and Artist Pages for all artists who desired to share their stories on the QI website.

• • The landing page for GLAAQN artists on the Quilt Index website can be found here: https://quiltindex.org//view/?type=docprojects&kid=62-185-11
• • The individual quilts documented during the 2023 GLAAQN Quilt Documentation Day event can be found here: https://quiltindex.org/results/?keywords=%22GLAAQN%20October%202023%20meeting%2C%20Livonia%2C%20Michigan%22&search=quilts&
• • Many of these quilt makers and their quilts are also listed on the Black Diaspora Quilt History Project (BDQHP) collections page: https://quiltindex.org//view/?type=docprojects&kid=62-185-1
• • For more information about the Great Lakes African American Quilters’ Network, check out the GLAAQN Website: https://www.glaaqn.com/

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Left: Marsha MacDowell, Right: Patricia Ann Felder

A Note About Quilt Documentation Projects by Dr. Marsha MacDowell The text below is an excerpt from: The Black Diaspora Quilt History Project: A Resource for Inclusive Preservation, Research, and Teaching (2023) by Marsha MacDowell and Liv Furman.
[A] major source of data about quilt history comes from regional grassroots quilt documentation projects that began in the mid-1980s. They were initiated and led primarily by quilt scholars or members of state and regional quilt guilds who wanted to make sure that information about this art form, one created primarily by women, was recorded. These projects were geographically circumscribed by county, state or province, or country; some were conducted over a set period of time and have been concluded, others are ongoing, and new ones are regularly initiated. A basic format involves project leaders encouraging makers and owners to bring their quilts into central community locations (museums, libraries, senior centers, etc.) on “Quilt Days.” Volunteers measure and photograph the quilts; describe physical features; and collect biographical information on the quiltmaker and social history of the quilt, including its production, ownership, purpose, function, and any affiliated stories. The collected information is recorded on standardized survey or inventory forms and sometimes the stories about the quilt and its maker are audio or video recorded. Shelly Zegart, one of the founders of the Kentucky Quilt Project, observes that these projects collectively form “the largest grassroots movement in the decorative arts in the last half of the 20th century. More than 200,000 quilts have been documented at more than 2,000 ‘Quilt Days’ and additional projects are starting every year” (Zegart n.d.). Notably, very few of these documentation projects made special efforts to document quilts made by artists of non-white* descent. 1
*“White” is used here to clarify that the stories and images of BIPOC quilts were rarely documented.

Implications & Significance
The 2023 GLAAQN Quilt Documentation Day centered and celebrated the lives of Black women, particularly Black women elders, their living relatives, and their late ancestors. The quilts varied in style, texture, and construction. The backgrounds of the artists were as varied as the quilts themselves. For example, Ernestine Bains brought in 2 quilts that were gifts from her great grandmother, Bertha Tillman Ambrose Dunlap, respectively named Grandma’s Colors  and Green, Yellow, and Red Lone Star. The decades-old quilts contained still vibrant reds, yellows, blues, and greens, in intricate and often repeating patterns. Another quiltmaker, Frances Jackson brought in multiple beautiful quilts, including her incredibly crafted, New York Beauty. Quiltmaker Toya R. B. Thomas documented many standout quilts as well, including her All That I Am quilt that featured portraiture, beading, and interdisciplinary textile printing techniques which demonstrate her complex and artful storytelling skill. Altogether, this event was a substantial documentation of knowledge regarding Black (women) textile artists in this region and their quilts.
 
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Grandma's Colors

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Green, Yellow, and Red Lone Star

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New York Beauty

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All That I Am

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Pictured: Pjay Alexander hanging the Celebrating Thirty Years quilt at the event.

As noted by MacDowell (in the excerpt above), quilt documentation days are outgrowths of grassroots archival praxis. Community-led quilt documentation events in Black communities are powerful tools for building and expanding Black textile archives, as well as documenting the lives and material legacies of Black quilt artists. Quilt documentation days can be conducted with minimal tools (i.e. pen and paper, a camera, quilt stand, computer/laptop, etc.) and with the assistance of community volunteers. Moreover, as stories of the quiltmakers and their quilts are shared during the documentation process, these events can also offer generative spaces for intergenerational conversation and story-sharing. Spaces such as this can be valuable spaces for establishing or building connections between experienced quiltmakers, younger generations of artists, and community youth.

The impact of this quilt documentation day was expanded through the utilization of digital mediums. All interested quilt artists were able to have artist pages and/or quilt pages created and added to the Quilt Index website. Some quilt artists also shared their quilt documentation on their own personal/guild websites and social media pages. Overall, the quilt documentation day resulted in the production of valuable digital humanities artifacts that document the identities, lives, and material legacies of Black quilt artists in the region.

While quilt documentation days have ample benefits, it is also important to consider spaces of tension and ways to safeguard the stories and life work of the quiltmakers involved. Before hosting a quilt documentation day in your community, be sure to determine what will happen with any physical or digital documentation after the event. Consider questions such as: How will the images and information be stored, preserved, and shared in the next 1-5 years? How will the images and information be stored, preserved, and shared after 5 years have passed? Who will help steward this documentation? What safeguards are in place to protect the quiltmakers, their stories, and their artwork? If the images and documentation will be shared digitally (i.e. website, social media pages, presentations, etc.), consider what safeguards will need to be in place to prevent images and narratives from being stolen, misused, or used without the owner's consent.
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Center: photographer Mark Harris assessing the Rose Garden quilt.

For more information about how to document quilts or how to plan your own quilt documentation day, see the following resources:
The Quilt Index Documentation Days Guide
The Quilt Index Guide to Documenting Quilts
The Quilt Index Form
Preparing Your Images for the Quilt Index

You can add your own quilt without attending a documentation day on the Submit A Quilt page.

1MacDowell, Marsha, and Furman, Liv. (2023). "The Black Diaspora Quilt History Project: A Resource for Inclusive Preservation, Research, and Teaching". Journal of Folklore and Education. 10(1), 36-45. https://jfepublications.org/article/the-black-diaspora-quilt-history-project

Written by Dr. Liv Furman (2023)

Great Lakes African American Quilters' Netwok
 

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