Artist: Anna Marie Horn Hanekamp
Date: 1900
Museum: San Jose Museum of Quilts - Textiles (San Jose, United States)
Technique: Silk
This stunning, graphically-designed quilt is composed of silk ribbons, each of which tied together a bundle of 25 to 50 cigars. The silk cigar ribbons were mostly collected by and traded amongst women. Often times the collector would display their stashes by sewing the ribbons into a pillow, tablecloth, or even more rarely (and as in this case, a queen-sized) quilt. This piece memorializes a predominantly male pastime in a medium whose artworks were created predominantly by females.Painstakingly sewn together using a crazy-quilt-like embroidery stitch, the blocks in this piece alternate between the log cabin pattern and the square-in-a-square pattern. The inside squares of the aforementioned blocks echo the squares in the quilt’s corners, drawing the eye to the corner and back again to the main pattern. The repetition of brand names on the quilt’s border increases dramatic impact. The black embroidery emphasizes the printed brand names of the cigars.Who smoked all of the cigars which were tied up with these ribbons? What was the occasion for smoking these cigars? What was talked about as the cigars were smoked or were they smoked in solitary? If those silk cigar ribbons could talk, oh the stories they would tell, oh the stories they would tell.Techniques: Hand embroidery Credit Line: Gift of Susan and Richard Horn
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