Login Email or Screen Name:
Password:
Can't Login?
The Quilt Show on Twitter
The Quilt Show on Facebook
Daily BlogWatch ShowsAlex & RickyBOMClassroomsThe ForumContestsFeaturesProjectsQuilt GalleryShoppeHelpMy Account
Search the SiteMember BlogsArticlesNewslettersQuilt Market ReportsPressEventsRSSMember StoriesWorld VideosQuilting Pioneers
Bernina Educational Videos




Site Sponsors:
 
 
TQS Articles Pam Holland Videos


May 16, 2012 02:57 pm
 
Only Articles with Video
 
An Exerpt from The Quilt: A History and Celebration of an American Art Form
June 01, 2009
Posted in General  |   1 Comments  |   Submit a Comment

32_the_quilt.jpg

Quilts are an excellent medium for telling a story that is nearly too grand for words.  Quilt blocks can act as chapters in a book facilitating the maker's story, and encouraging the viewers to investigate further. 

One such quilt, the Oklahoma History Quilt, was donated to the Oklahoma Historical Society in 1935.  This remarkable quilt, made by Oklahoma City native Camille Nixdorf Phelan, is an embroidered masterpiece depicting 300 years of Oklahoma history.  The quilt is a testament to one quilter's tenacity and love of history.

In the 1920s, Camille had a passion for embroidery and enjoyed copying pictures to cloth using that technique.  "When making quilts became a popular fad, I turned to that pastime," Camille explains.  "I decided that I would make an embroidered record of the persons responsible for Oklahoma's history.  Then the though came-'Why not add the incidents making up that history?'"

In order to complete this quilt, Camille spent two years studying Oklahoma history.  She researched old records, corresponded with historians, and was able to talk with many people who were part of Oklahoma's recent history.  Camille worked on this quilt during the Oklahoma Dustbowl and consequent Great Depression, a time of great sadness and extreme population mobility as families lost their land and were forced to move on.  Camille later said she was influenced to create a patriotic quilt because "in most of the published records of this formative period, the sordid and rough element had been exploited to the exclusion of the cultural and artistic...and I want to express my own appreciation for the 'Land of the Mistletoe.'"  In doing this, Camille included blocks that represented political events, such as Napoleon signing the Louisiana Purchase; historical events like the Oklahoma Land Run of 1889 and the state's first oil well; and famous people, including football legend Jim Thorpe.  And no quilt depicting Oklahoma history would be complete without showing appreciation for Native American contributions to the state's history.  Although the story Camille presents is sometimes romanticized, her work shows a conscious effort to accurately portray the Native American peoples who lived in Oklahoma over the 300-year time period, including the Cherokee, Osage, Kiowa, and Creek.

The entire quilt, which consists of 51 blocks, took four years to make.  Camille spent many hours sizing her drawings to the blocks, creating the outlines of faces, and later adding the expressions.  In her own words, "Every stitch of the embroidering is my own work and I spent all my spare time for four years on actual construction."  The quilting alone used 20 100-yard spools of thread.  Camille proudly presented the Oklahoma History Quilt to the Historical Society at a banquet in Oklahoma City of November 30, 1935.

The Quilt:  A History and Cellebration of an American Art Form by Elise Roberts

Excerpt:  pages 58+ 59 from Chapter 3:  Commemorative Quilting

 

 
 

 
Previous ArticleAll ArticlesNext Article
 
 
Article Archives
 
January 2012
 
November 2011
 
October 2011
 
September 2011
 
July 2011
 
June 2011
 
May 2011
 
January 2011
 
December 2010
 
November 2010
 
August 2010
 
July 2010
 
May 2010
 
April 2010
 
March 2010
 
December 2009
 
November 2009
 
July 2009
 
June 2009
 
April 2009
 
January 2009
 
December 2008
 
October 2008
 
September 2008
 
August 2008
 
June 2008
Back
Search this Site
Purchase a Membership

Basic Membership

Redeem a Gift Certificate

Purchase a Gift Certificate for a Friend

Purchase a Series DVD

Click Here to Watch this Show
 The Quilt Show Contests:
Click for more details
 MyAds:
Check out the Bargain Shed
at The Quilting Garden
and save up to 40%!
Vicki Welsh Hand Dyed Fabric
Kits, Gradients & Palettes
Shop Online or Custom Order
This-n-That Fabrics
Quality Quilting Fabrics
Shop online, Save Up To 50%
Quilt Kit Market
Your source for quilt kits
Visit our online store today
ChristaQuilts.com
Premium Fabric, Fast Service
FREE US SHIPPING, No minimum
Heirloom Quilts by Jean
Retro, Fabulous Quilts
Queensbury, NY USA
EverythingQuilts.com
Kits, Jelly Rolls, Charms
Coupon #: QS2012 save 10%
Djs Discount Fabric
Quality Fabric At Low Prices
Vicksburg, Ms. 39180 USA
NEW--* by QuiltMoxie *--NEW
E----* Fun Rotary Cut *-nEw
W-* Binding ePattern *--neW

Advertise on The Quilt Show
 Travel Opportunities:
Travel to Ireland