To follow up on the excitement and interest in our library’s Annual Quilt Show, and to welcome the new downtown Arts Center to Decatur, this blog will highlight books from our collection focusing on folk art and the visual arts in Alabama.
First though, did you know that one of the official emblems of the state Alabama is the lovely Pine Burr Quilt? Here are a couple links to information on and instructions for this pattern:
http://www.archives.alabama.gov/emblems/st_quilt.html
http://www.archives.alabama.gov/activity/PineBurrQuiltbrochure.pdf
At DPL, we already have
many books of interest to our patrons who enjoy the Arts, and we are evaluating
the existing collection to add more that may supplement or support Arts Center
students as well. While there are many
related fiction books with artist characters and artistic themes, most of this
current list are books from our nonfiction collection (shelved in the 700’s).
These include exhibition catalogs, books of art history and criticism, artist
biographies, and books on craft technique.
Some of the books are cataloged and housed in our Alabama Room
collection, and as such are non-circulating, but may be used on the library premises.
However, the majority of the books are in the general collection and are
available for checkout; most of these art books
are large sized and profusely illustrated. Art books such as these
titles are a delight to look at and informative to read!
Quilts and Fiber Arts:
ALABAMA STITCH BOOK: Projects and Stories Celebrating hand-Sewing, Quilting, and Embroidery for Contemporary Sustainable Style. Natalie Chanin. STC Craft, New York: 2008. 746.44 CHAALABAMA STUDIO SEWING & DESIGN. Natalie Chanin. STC Craft: 2012. 746.4 CHA
THE FREEDOM QUILTING BEE. Nancy Callahan. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa: 1987. 976 CAL
During the late 1960’s Civil rights era, the black women of Wilcox County created quilts and a handcraft cooperative, the Freedom Quilting Bee, acclaimed across the nation.
Alabama Folk Art:
ALABAMA FOLK POTTERY.
Joey Brackner. University of Alabama
Press, Tuscaloosa: 2006. ALA 738.61 BRA.A valuable resource for collectors and scholars, Director of the Alabama Center for Traditional Culture Brackner presents a definitive survey of folk potters and pottery traditions in Alabama from the early historical period to the present.
Fine Arts in Alabama:
ALABAMA MASTERS: Artists
and Their Work. Edited by Georgine Clarke.
Alabama State Council on the Arts, Montgomery: 2008. ALA 745.0976 ALAFull color catalog of a 2007 “Year of Alabama Arts” exhibition featuring work by 20th century Alabama artists from the collections of six major state museums.
A visual history of printmaking in the South. Including biographical sketches, samples of work and analysis of imagery of over 60 artists.
Photography:
OF TIME AND PLACE:
Walker Evans and William Christenberry.
Thomas W. Southall. Amon Carter
Museum: 1990. 779.9976 SOUFrom a joint exhibit of Walker Evan’s iconic photographs from the 1930’s and native Alabamian William Christenberry’s art of a generation later. Also includes essays exploring the interrelationships between these two artists.
Graphic books (about
Alabama):
DARK ROOM: A Memoir in
Black & White. Lila Qunitero Weaver.
University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa: 2012.Transplanted at age five from Buenos Aires to Alabama, author and artist Weaver encountered the racially charged culture of the early 1960s as a Latina who is neither black nor white. She creates a emotional story in a rarely heard voice from the turbulent past of U.S. race relations in this unique graphic novel format.
SCOTTSBORO ALABAMA: A story in linoleum cuts. Lin Shi Khan and Tony Perez. New York University Press: 2002. ALA 345.73 KHA
While not produced by regional artists, this book’s topic ties it to this list. An example of powerful political art, this graphic book of linocuts from 1935 links the struggles of black America, as seen through the Scottsboro case, with the oppression of the working class.