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Spring Break!

Spring Break!

Written by: 
Linzee McCray

Looking for something to do besides donning your bikini and hitting the beach this spring break?  (Hahahahaha) Check out these current quilt exhibitions!

Probably the most talked about current show is at the International Quilt Study Center in Lincoln, NebraskaUncovered: The Ken Burns Collection. That's right—famed documentary filmmaker  Ken Burns loves and collects quilts. (You can read why in this New York Times interview, here.) If you have three minutes, check out this YouTube clip—it'll whet your appetite for more.

https://youtu.be/NiMeCgaVF3o

You can also visit the IQSCM web site to see the individual quilts from the exhibition here. (And there are plenty of other pieces on display at the IQSCM, too. Check this listing for more information.)

Current exhibitions at the National Quilt Museum in Paducah, Kentucky includes New Quilts from an Old Favorite: Bow Tie.

Caribbean Ties by Nancy Lambert

Ingenious uses for the very traditional bow tie block will inspire you to think of variations on tried-and-true designs. Other exhibitions are listed here.

The Texas Quilt Museum in LaGrange, Texas has three diverse exhibitions (but just through April 1, so hurry)!  Twenty-five blue-and-white, 19th-century quilts are included in Antique Indigo Quilts from the Poos Collection.

Medallion, c. 1830, artist unknown from Antique Quilts from the Poos Collection

Fifteen prizewinners from the 2017 International Quilt Association's juried show are on display in Quilts: A World of Beauty.

At the Waterhole by Sheila Finzer

You can read about all three exhibitions, including one featuring Jane Dunnewold,  here.

The New England Quilt Museum in Lowell, Massachusetts has 35 award-winning quilts on display as part of Quilts Japan: The 13th Quilt Nihon Exhibition.

Ring by Yuko Maekawa

And finally, my ulterior motive for this post...encouraging you to visit the Iowa Quilt Museum in Winterset, Iowa, before the exhibition Feed Sacks closes on April 15. The quilts are drawn largely from some outstanding Iowa collections, but also include quilts from Roderick Kiracofe's collection that were featured in his book Unconventional and Unexpected: American Quilts Below the Radar . Here are a few examples of what you'll see when you visit. 

In addition to quilts, a case displays artist-bound copies of the book Feed Sacks: The Colorful History of a Frugal Fabric.
While most of the quilts in the exhibition are older and sewn by unknown makers, the quilt on the left, made entirely of feed sacks, was stitched just a few years ago by feed sack collector and expert Judy Prohaska.

So there you have it...bikinis or quilt museums? Only you can decide...

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