Perhaps it was the AIDS Quilt that redefined what a monument could look like and who could create it. Or maybe it was the quilters of Gee's Bend or the Freedom Quilting Circle in Alabama, taking the scraps of their lives — old military camo uniforms, overalls, flour sacks — honoring the living and the dead. Quilts as monuments, memorials, large and small, stretch far back into our American story.

Monuments are a contentious issue these days in the South and beyond. But right now, in Alabama, the Sew Their Names Project — some 20 quilters, a reverend, and a judge — are bringing unlikely collaborations together to embroider the names of hundreds of forgotten people who were once enslaved. Creating quilts that record and tell.

Today The Kitchen Sisters, together with the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University, present: Quilts as Monuments: Sew Their Names

The Kitchen Sisters Present

The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia

Quilts as Monuments: Sew Their Names

JUN 16, 202634 MIN
The Kitchen Sisters Present

Quilts as Monuments: Sew Their Names

JUN 16, 202634 MIN

Description

Perhaps it was the AIDS Quilt that redefined what a monument could look like and who could create it. Or maybe it was the quilters of Gee's Bend or the Freedom Quilting Circle in Alabama, taking the scraps of their lives — old military camo uniforms, overalls, flour sacks — honoring the living and the dead. Quilts as monuments, memorials, large and small, stretch far back into our American story.Monuments are a contentious issue these days in the South and beyond. But right now, in Alabama, the Sew Their Names Project — some 20 quilters, a reverend, and a judge — are bringing unlikely collaborations together to embroider the names of hundreds of forgotten people who were once enslaved. Creating quilts that record and tell.Today The Kitchen Sisters, together with the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University, present: Quilts as Monuments: Sew Their Names