For Immediate Release Contact: Lon Bouldin The Arts Company (917) 370-1002 [email protected] Images for press available upon request

THE ARTS COMPANY Presents GEE’S BEND QUILT RUGS The Art and Legacy of A Gee’s Bend Quilt Collection

Opens During First Saturday Art Crawl Downtown Nashville September 2, 6PM-9PM Continuing through September 28

Nashville, TN (Fall 2017) – This September, The Arts Company presents Gee’s Bend Quilt Rugs: The Art and Legacy of a Gee’s Bend Quilt Collection, a new series of handmade museum-quality rugs based on the original quilts created by a group of African-American women from Gee’s Bend, Alabama. Rug designer Barbara Barran, founder of Classic Rug Collection, New York, has translated the multi-generational quilters’ highly-prized collec- tion of contemporary art into a stunning rug collection. The rugs are produced under exclusive license with the individual quilters. All of the quilt designs are copyrighted by the individual Gee’s Bend quilters, and each quilter receives a royalty for every one of her rugs that is sold.

The exhibit opens during First Saturday Art Crawl Downtown on September 2, from 6PM to 9PM, and will con- tinue through September 28, during regular gallery hours, 11am-5pm, Tuesday-Saturday. www.TheArtsCompa- ny.com

ABOUT Gee’s Bend Quilt Rugs: The Art and Legacy of a Gee’s Been Quilt Collection

Bringing their artistic traditions with them from Africa, the women made quilts for the most utilitarian purposes: to soften the feel of corncob mattresses, to stuff into the walls of their drafty cabins, and for basic warmth. When folk art collector William Arnett noticed the quilts on clothes lines as he scoured the South for artwork, he imme- diately purchased numerous quilts and vowed to have them displayed in a museum for fine art, rather than in a folk art museum.

The show that Arnett mounted at the Whitney Museum in 2002 broke all attendance records. The New York Times Arts Writer Michael Kimmelman referred to the quilts as “some of the most miraculous works of modern art America has produced. Imagine Matisse and Klee . . . arising not from rarefied Europe, but from the caramel soil of the rural South in the form of women, descendants of slaves when Gee's Bend was a plantation.”

ABOUT The Exhibition at The Arts Company

Barbara Barran signed a licensing agreement with the Gee’s Bend Quilt Collective in 2002, and three years later, The Arts Company hosted a Nashville lunch reception for 75 of the quilters. According to Barran, “The reception was followed by a smashingly successful exhibit of Gee’s Bend Quit Collection rugs at the highly respected Nashville gallery.” In 2010, Arnett’s collection formed the basis of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, a group dedicated to the preservation and popularization of African-American art. To celebrate the donation of Gee’s Bend Quilts by this group to the Metropolitan Museum, the de Young Museum, the New Orleans Museum of Art, and the High Muse- um, Barran has launched a new collection of Gee’s Bend Quilt rugs. The September exhibit at The Arts Company will show this group of flat woven, hand-tufted, and hand-knotted rugs with quilt patterns by and , two women who were honored by the National Endowment for the Arts in 2015 for their artistic contributions to America.

One of the rugs, “Housetop” by Qunnie Pettway, is a repeat design from the first collection;“Vegetation,” another hand-knotted piece, is by Loretta Bennett, Qunnie’s daughter. Several of the hand-tufted rugs are from designs by Louisiana Bendolph, one of the younger generation of quilters. Barran used Louisiana’s “Three Squares” pattern for the first-ever GBQC runner. Annie Bendolph’s 1930 quilt, “Wild Goose Chase,” hand-tufted in cut and looped New Zealand wool, is the signature piece for the new rug collection. Contemporary quilter Nancy Pittway is rep- resented by two rugs, including her “Housetop,” in a hand-loomed cotton flat weave.

ABOUT Barbara Barran

Rug designer Barbara Barran, owner of Classic Rug Collection in New York, was specializing in her own quilt- patterned rugs when she saw The New York Times review about the Gee’s Bend Quilts and immediately contacted the Arnett family, who had collected the quilts and arranged for their exhibition. Barran signed a licensing agree- ment with the Gee’s Bend Quilt Collective, and she has maintained a relationship with the quilters since that time. The first rug collection was shown and sold with great success at major museums across the US, including the Whitney Museum, the Milwaukee Museum of Art, the Boston Museum of Fine Art, the Corcoran Museum, as well as fifteen other museums.

ABOUT The Arts Company

The Arts Company is a primary arts destination in Downtown Nashville—since 1996--representing artwork by artists from emerging to legendary, in photography, painting, and sculpture. Presenting 12 exhibitions each year; collaboration with other galleries statewide; partnering with 5th Avenue of the Arts District to produce the First Saturday Art Crawl Downtown; and specializing in full-service artistic resources for businesses and individuals.

ABOUT First Saturday Art Crawl Downtown Nashville

First Saturday Art Crawl Downtown, presented by 5th Avenue of the Arts, is a monthly visual arts event in downtown Nashville. On every First Saturday, an alliance of art galleries and museums collectively invite the public to explore the vibrant Nashville downtown art scene. Admission free, the event welcomes approximately 2,000 attendees each month, bringing more attention and recognition to this energetic destination for visual arts.

THE ARTS COMPANY 215 5th Avenue of the Arts, North • 615-254-2040 • Tuesday-Saturday, 11am-5:00 pm www.TheArtsCompany.com

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