[As part of our
annual Virginia trip last summer, the boys and I—and AmericanStudier madre—visited
Colonial Williamsburg for the first time.
So this week I’ll AmericanStudy some different histories and elements that are
part of that complex and compelling historic site. Add your thoughts, on
Williamsburg or other historic sites, in comments!]
Three telling exhibits
and pieces from Williamsburg’s
amazing folk art museum.
1)
An exhibition of quilts: Through December 6th,
the museum’s McCarl Gallery will feature “A
Celebration of Quilts,” an exhibition featuring 12 noteworthy American
quilts from the 18th through the 20th centuries. The
exhibit includes pieces by African American, Hawaiian, and Amish quiltmakers (among
other artisans), and likewise runs the gamut of techniques and styles. Serving
as both utilitarian household item and artistic products, as both material and
artistic culture, quilts are a perfect example of the complexity
and value of folk art (compared to the more obvious “fine arts”).
2)
Pueblo jewelry: Through September 5th,
2016, the museum’s Peebles Gallery will feature “Thunderbirds:
Jewelry of the Santo Domingo Pueblo,” an exhibition that highlights a
particular, Depression-era jewelry style from a New Mexico
pueblo with a longstanding artistic tradition. Mass-produced (compared to
the pueblo’s norms, at least) in response to the Depression’s economic
exigencies, and using any and all available materials for the same reason,
these jewelry pieces are thus both distinct from the pueblo’s traditions and
yet represent a stage and evolution of those histories—and are vital American
folk art in any case.
3)
Baby
in Red Chair: And then there’s that baby, one of the perennial
representations of the museum’s collections and spirit. Currently exhibited as
part of an American
folk portraits collection in the Clark Foundation Gallery, the baby embodies
the practice and appeal of folk art—simple yet eloquent, anonymous yet
enduring, everyday yet reflecting our reality in the way that only the arts
can. There’s a reason why the baby has been one of the museum’s most popular
pieces, and it’s the same reason why the museum has been so successful—because
folk art is a vibrant and vital part of our national community and identity.
Next
Williamsburg post tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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