International Quilt Museum announces ‘A New Deal for Quilts’ book release
International Quilt Museum announces ‘A New Deal for Quilts’ book release
The book explores how the U.S. government of the 1930s utilized quilts and quiltmaking in response to the unemployment, financial turmoil, and displacement that occurred during the Great Depression.
While quiltmaking represented the thrifty values of the 1930s, it also provided impoverished women working in federally sponsored sewing rooms with new vocational skills and a supportive social outlet. Quilts were also feel-good objects that bolstered people’s morale and provided comforts of home to Americans in precarious living situations during these trying
times.
Smucker, who also guest curated the exhibition at the IQM, was inspired by 1930s-era government-sponsored photos intended to demonstrate the successes of the New Deal. Beautifully illustrated and diligently researched, the book utilizes period photographs and images of quilts to evoke the visual environment of the Depression while exploring the
ways craft, work, race, poverty, and politics intersected during this pivotal era.
For more information on the book and research project, visit newdealquilts.janneken.org.
To learn more about the museum and the exhibitions now showing, visit internationalquiltmuseum.org.