Become informed & inspired by artists whose works advanced Western Art History.

Patchwork Quilt

Museum of Modern Art, NY, New York

Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller Fund 573 1970
© Romare Bearden Foundation. All Rights Reserved
Licensed by Vaga, New York

Zoom & Explore

Guidance to Describe:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Describe what you see.

People:

A beautiful, black woman is stretched out on her side. She cradles her head on a floral pillow. Her left foot dangles over the edge of what appears to be a daybed.

Place:

Unknown.

Objects & Things:

The figure wears a pink fitted, head covering. The small drop earring and the white of her eye are in dramatic contrast with the tone of her skin. A bangle bracelet encircles her wrist. Pink stripped fabric becomes a belt. The patchwork quilt she lies upon is a combination of different patches of fabric. The quilt is finished with a neat, scalloped border.

Guidance to Interpret & Conclude:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Use accredited sources.     3. Ignite your imagination.

Interpret:

Work of this nature is symbolic of African American Homespun Art. After the American Civil War, black women created quilts from scraps, and old clothing, out of necessity. Patchwork Quilt is a fusion of collaged squares of fabric and paint. Bearden reaches back to an artifact of a Nubian Egyptian ruling Queen of the kingdom of Nubia, along the Nile river. Bearden’s figure is in profile typical of around 3800 B.C. In recent times, the figure describes a woman of African heritage. The artist’s visual reference combines black and chocolate brown, skin tones.

Conclude:

Throughout Bearden’s artistic lifetime, his stylish sophistication indirectly opens the hearts and minds of other cultures. Bearden’s themes always portray people of color with beauty, grace, dignity, and intelligence, despite their struggles. The artist remains true to his process: he says, “I try to show when some things are taken out of their usual context and put in a new one, they are given an entirely new character.” We can grasp the depth and rich narrative the African, American culture represents, from observing Patchwork Quilt.

Go back to Era & Artist, Painting, History & Culture. Contact me for help.

SOURCES:
OVERVIEW

VISUAL ARTS ENCYCLOPEDIA 2013 visual-arts-cork.com – Postmodern art. Web.

ARTIST, PAIINTING, HISTORY & CULTURE Romare Bearden

©2009 ROMARE BEARDEN FOUNDATION, 2090 Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Blvd, suite 202, New York, NY 10027, 212 665-9550. Tel/ 212 665-9555. Fax. Web.

Patchwork Quilt

©The Museum of Modern Art. NY. The Collection. Credit: Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller Fund (cut and pasted cloth and paper with synthetic polymer paint on composition board. 35 3/4 x 47 7/8 inches (90.9 x 121.6 cm) Falls River School. Tone & Mood. Web.

Postmodern era,Abstract, Expressionist movement

1970s known facts. African American Quilting: A Long Rich History, Web.

ESSENTIAL TOPIC Subject Matter: History. Portrait. Genre. Landscape. Still Life.

“Hierarchy of the Genres” Visual Arts Encyclopedia 2015. Web.©Smithsonian American Art Museum. During the 1970s and 1980s, Bearden’s subjects derived from African American genre and myth, Web.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. You may see things differently.

Color:

The reflection of light on a surface produces color. The brighter, the more color you see. Pastel colors mingle with dark brown and strong black. A strip of bright red/ orange enlivens the composition. The painting does not look the same without it. Cover the strip with your finger to notice the difference.

Line:

A line is the path of a moving point; it can be of any length or width. Lines create geometric, or biomorphic shapes resembling living organisms. Patches of fabric are various geometric shapes. The figure is biomorphic.

Texture:

Your brain registers texture. Pause to sense the smoothness of the woman’s skin, and the soft fabric.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Harmony/ Unity.

Focal Point:

The reclining figure.

Harmony/ Unity:

The work takes up the Picture Plane (flat surface) out to its edges to form a “Golden rectangle.” This geometric concept allows a sense of completeness to emerge unifying the elements within.

Variation:

Multiple changes in the elements of a composition create variation. When you consider the stripes, checks, polka dots and florals; various sizes and shapes; number of patches surrounding the figure; and the scallop hem, the composition is really interesting.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Perspective is an artful illusion.

No.

Flat Perspective:

The entire Picture Plane is shown with the same clarity. Foreground, Middle ground, and Background are absent. Bearden abandons the need to create an illusion of depth/ distance - contrary to Perspective (Basic:)

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Mood.

African American, Contemporary Genre:

Contemporary Genre is a refreshing change from old-fashion genre scenes of ordinary life, especially domestic situations associated particularly with 17th-century Dutch and Flemish artists.

Bearden is a well-versed scholar on historical, subject matter. In addition to the artists painterly skill, his knowledge enriches our understanding of this painting.

Bearden creates a calm mood for the resting figure’s nap.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Characteristics.

Era:

Postmodern. The Age of Postmodernist art (1970 – present)

Movement:

Abstract Expressionist/ Collagist/ Painter. American (1940s – 1950s)
Neither wholly abstract or expressionistic, the movement encompasses different styles.

Characteristics of Style:

Less realistic in style. Various textures and objects.
Collage is a French word which means “to glue or paste” objects and things, to a surface.