The fiber arts are experiencing renewed and rigorous recognition. Final 12 months, as an illustration, fashionable and up to date weaving loomed massive in main exhibitions in america, which explored the craft’s historic roots and influence on fashionable artwork, alongside high-profile reveals all over the world dedicated to artworks created from cloth and thread. As writer-historian Glenn Adamson proclaimed, 2024 was the 12 months that “the artwork world went on a excessive fiber food regimen.”
This 12 months, amid a slate of reveals exploring the wealthy prospects of cloth, American quilts are having a second in artwork museums from coast to coast. In-depth exhibitions showcase the craftsmanship and ingenuity of regional quilting communities in Routed West: Twentieth-Century African American Quilts in California on the Berkeley Artwork Museum and Pacific Movie Archive (via November 30) and Of Salt and Spirit: Black Quilters within the American South on the Memphis Brooks Museum of Artwork (via January 4, 2026). Equally, the 2024–25 exhibition Patterns in Abstraction: Black Quilts from the Excessive’s Assortment on the Excessive Museum of Artwork in Atlanta spotlighted clever quilts from the establishment’s everlasting assortment, all stitched by Black girls. Unraveling the narrative potential of quilts, Cloth of a Nation: American Quilt Tales From the Museum of Nice Arts, Boston on the Frist Artwork Museum in Nashville lately associated the nation’s histories via textiles, and Indigo and the Artwork of Quiltmaking on the Taft Museum of Artwork in Cincinnati (via January 11, 2026) focuses on international dye traditions.

Including a biophilic perspective to the combination, the American Folks Artwork Museum opened An Ecology of Quilts: The Pure Historical past of American Textiles in late September, marking the museum’s reopening after a summer-long closure for renovations. That includes 30 quilts from the 18th via the twentieth century, the exhibition explores the bountiful ways in which nature, trade, and quilt making entangle. Reasonably than emphasizing the quilters’ identities, it examines the relationships between pure and human-powered methods and processes, beginning on the roots of quilt making: the lifeforms (vegetation, animals, bugs) needed to supply cloth — and, due to this fact, quilts.
An Ecology of Quilts opens with a trio of whole-cloth quilts: one an all-white subject of cotton cloth embellished with patterns of raised dots and florals (“Cornucopia and Dots Whitework Quilt,” c. 1800–1820) contrasted by two brightly coloured examples. On the alternative wall, botanical illustrations and vials of frequent, conventional dyestuffs, together with bugs (cochineal) and dried plant matter, introduce the basics of pure dye, used to paint the 2 vibrant quilts that begin the present. A gradient of cloth swatches highlights the brilliance of the extracted hues: indigo (deep blue), madder root (vivid crimson), and weld (golden yellow). Via an adjoining doorway, a case shows silk cocoons and handfuls of uncooked wool, linen, and cotton fibers, alongside squares of fabric woven from every, with an invite to “please contact.”

From right here, the present shifts to a standout part that exudes the layered lushness of a flourishing botanical backyard. With an abundance of vivid vining blossoms, “Pot of Flowers Quilt with Birds” (c. 1860) radiates a sense of unbridled pleasure and abundance. Its neighbor, “Flower Quilt” (c. 1955–63), an album-style quilt stitched by American sociologist Raymond F. Bellamy, displays his curiosity in botany, rigorously cataloguing a special sort of flower in every sq.. Highlighting the symbolic language of vegetation, a inexperienced and white mourning quilt from the mid-1800s (“Members of the Freewill Baptist Church Presentation Quilt for William A. Sargent”) memorializes members of a church group with handwritten messages in ink, together with appliquéd weeping willows to symbolize unhappiness.
Within the closing gallery, a grouping of geometric quilts stitched from salvaged scraps communicate to a historical past of thrift and resourcefulness in quilt making. Amongst these works are the dynamic, polyester and cotton “Pinwheel Variation Quilt” (1960) by Gee’s Bend quilter Malissia Pettway and artist Tomie Nagano’s “Ajiro-Monyo” (1995), created from classic kimonos and drawing inspiration from boro textiles and woven basketry.

Though the exhibition’s subtitle, The Pure Historical past of American Textiles, has the air of a faculty course and appears to vow a definitive deep dive, it’s truly extra of an introductory sampler. A smattering of attention-grabbing tidbits on a variety of matters (e.g., international commerce, slave labor, the invention of the cotton gin, Nineteenth-century herbaria, flower symbolism) pepper the wall texts. Many of those factoids might be the seeds for spinoff reveals — and, taken collectively, might veer the curation right into a muddled mess. However, just like the “Philadelphia Pavement Quilt” (c. 1930) — which seems like a tidy grid of tiny, exact squares up shut, however reveals its dazzling composition anew from a distance — the exhibition comes into concentrate on totally different ranges. A sluggish, shut viewing, spent absorbing every label and analyzing the corresponding particulars of the quilts, illustrations, and swatches, uncovers an internet of connections between supplies and strategies, expertise and commerce, vegetation and other people — and, in the end, the hive of exercise wrapped up in every quilt’s bodily historical past. The attractive, well-considered collection of quilts additionally coheres on a purely visible stage, as flowers, leaf motifs, and cloth scraps pinwheel throughout the surfaces.
The eclectic threads of An Ecology of Quilts merge to inform a narrative that begins outside, with seeds sprouting, blooming, and reaching towards the solar. Whether or not pushed by a need to doc the great thing about flowers, flip castoff cloth fragments into cozy bedcovers, or harness the colours hidden inside vegetation, the present invitations viewers to see the myriad ways in which human ingenuity has interlaced with pure forces to form quilting as an expressive American artwork kind.







An Ecology of Quilts: The Pure Historical past of American Textiles continues on the American Folks Artwork Museum (2 Lincoln Sq., Lincoln Sq., Higher West Aspect, Manhattan) via March 1, 2026. The exhibition was curated by Emelie Gevalt and Austin Losada.