A large rectangular quilt made up of fifteen blocks, each featuring appliquéd figures, animals, plants, and celestial motifs. The scenes include people dancing, animals like elephants, horses, and birds, and symbolic images such as suns, moons, stars, hands, and crosses. The color palette is earthy and muted, with shades of tan, cream, brown, orange, navy, and pale pink. Each block tells a distinct story, with stylized, simplified forms arranged against solid backgrounds, bordered by a thin red edge.

Harriet Powers. Pictorial quilt. 1895-98. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

When the second wave feminist movement in the 1970s brought domestic art into the discussion of art history, textiles became a central topic. This led to the rediscovery of Harriet Powers, whose two surviving quilts currently hang in the Smithsonian and in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

Powers, born a slave in Georgia in 1837, created the quilts after she was emancipated. She made use of appliqué techniques and storytelling often found in the textiles of Western Africa. While these textiles had typically been created by men, once the tradition was picked up in the United States women became the primary creators.

Powers became significant in academic circles more than half a century after her death as an exemplar of the influence and power of women’s domestic art and art inspired by traditions outside the Western canon, showing not only this type of art’s historical purpose and importance but its aesthetic influence and significance.

The Pictorial Quilt

Of the two quilts created by Harriet Powers, historians believe she created the Bible Quilt first. The quilt presents tales ranging from Cain and Abel to the Last Supper. Harriet Powers’s second creation, the Pictorial Quilt, finds her going further, creating a potent juxtaposition of biblical stories along with real-life tales.

Powers provided a key for both of her quilts, explaining what each panel represented and allowing viewers to accurately understand what is depicted.

A quilt block with appliquéd figures on a pale background bordered in red with white dots. The design includes a large brown animal with pointed ears, a silhouetted man and woman facing each other, a crescent moon, a striped rectangular shape with a looped cord and drop, and several circular starburst motifs.

Detail. Harriet Powers. Pictorial quilt. 1895-98. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

This panel, found in the middle of the third row, depicts “rich people who were taught nothing of God. Bob Johnson and Kate Bell of Virginia. They told their parents to stop the clock at one and tomorrow it would strike one and so it did. This was the signal that they had entered everlasting punishment. The independent hog which ran 500 miles from Georgia to Virginia, her name was Betts.”

A quilt block with appliquéd shapes on a tan background bordered in red with white dots. The central figures are a man and woman holding hands, surrounded by a striped snake-like creature, a large sunburst circle, an open hand, an eye, birds, circular starburst motifs, and abstract purple shapes.

Detail. Harriet Powers. Pictorial quilt. 1895-98. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

One panel on the top row depicts Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. Eve is tempted by the snake, Adam holds his rib, and “God’s all-seeing eye and God’s merciful hand” are present.

A quilt block with appliquéd figures on a dark blue background bordered in red with white dots. The central imagery shows human silhouettes, including one large figure in a dress, a two-toned figure, and smaller figures around them. Scattered throughout the panel are bright orange comet-like shapes with circular starburst ends, as well as an appliquéd hand, rabbit, and mouse.

Detail. Harriet Powers. Pictorial quilt. 1895-98. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

The panel in the center depicts a real event from November 13, 1833, in which falling stars made people fear that the end of the world had arrived.

Powers’ Pictorial Quilt, part of the Museum of Fine Art in Boston collection in the Artstor Digital Library, is represented along with close-ups of various panels, each telling its own story with a limited number of abstract images. You can also find images of Harriet Powers, providing a glimpse of the creator herself.

– Samantha Moreno

Source:

HICKS, KYRA E. “Powers, Harriet.” In The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Volume 23: Folk Art, edited by Crown Carol and Rivers Cheryl, 386-88. University of North Carolina Press, 2013. https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5149/9781469607993_crown.211.

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