I am very excited to share that my quilt Echo is featured in a "Modern Quilting: A Selection of Quilts from QuiltCon shows" at the Virginia Quilt Museum. The exhibit contains 24 quilts, made by 23 artists and runs through December.
The quilt museum is in Dayton, VA and occupies an old mill. The modern quilting exhibit was on the first floor. The second floor housed a collection of beautiful applique quilts and lots of antique sewing machines along with a learning center.
The quilt shown above was made in 1858 by Esther Matthews and is called Shenandoah Valley Botanical Album. The quilt contains 25 blocks showing a different plants from the Shenandoah Valley. The workmanship was exquisite. The quilt was passed down through four generations of her family and donated in 2006 to the museum.
I was excited that quilts from fellow members of the Triangle MQG, namely Sara Young, Charles Cameron, Michelle Wilke, and Mackenzie Barrett were were also featured in the exhibit. Four of the five of us were able to attend the artist event.
The artist event was held Saturday afternoon where we were given the opportunity to talk about our quilts to an audience of about 50 people. It was fun to hear what other makers had to say about their designs and process and talk to others in attendance.
I ended up dressing to match my quilt!
Echo is a quilted version of a flowsnake fractal, a never-ending geometric pattern made by continuous line bending at 60-degree angles. Originally designed for the Magenta Pantone challenge, the fractal image was created online. The quilting used directional quilting lines in magenta and light pink that extend the fractal pattern into the quilt's empty spaces. This invites viewers to wonder: is the fractal expanding into those empty spaces or contracting and leaving behind an echo of where it once was?
Dayton, Ohio is about 4ish hour drive from my home. As part of the trip, we spent a few hours hiking at the Natural Bridge State Park in Virginia. The bridge is about 200 feet tall and is the largest limestone arch in North America. It was purchased in 1774 by Thomas Jefferson.
Dayton is a small town (population ~1,600) which includes a Mennonite community. Saturday morning, I was delighted to see about a dozen horse and buggies traveling down main street!
It is an honor to have my quilt Echo featured in this exhibit and I thank the MQG and the Virginia Quilt Museum for supporting this event. It was such a fun weekend and I truly enjoyed the event.
Congratulations for having Echo in the exhibit; your smile standing next to it says it all to me. I'm glad you were able to travel to be there for the artist event. How wonderful the show will have a nice long run!
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