Showing posts with label quilthistory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quilthistory. Show all posts

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Adirondack Museum - More Information

This has become increasingly exciting.  It has been brought to my attention that my uncle's quilt is not just a personal quilt, the quilt has historical significance in the State of New York (where I was born and where the quilt (of course) is from).  I never realized what I had sitting in that old cedar chest all these years.

The exhibit starts on May 25, 2009 and runs through October 2009.  I have been asked to be present for the Opening Day of the exhibit, as it appears my quilt will be the 'mainstay' of the exhibit....excited does not cover the host of feelings I'm having!!! 

I also found out that the Bruno's originated in Canada, and I'm part French-Canadian!

I checked with my father (the quilt belonged to his father's brother) but my father's not sure he remembers much (as he says) after all he is only 92 years young! 

I understand my Aunt Alice (the quilt was made for her father..my great uncle) gave my father a Bible with the family tree.  However, for some [odd] reason my father gave that Bible to my cousin (because he's still a Bruno and since I got married I guess I'm not...LOL), so I'm calling him to see if he still has it...Please keep your fingers crossed!

Here's the latest letter from the curator at the museum:

Dear Paula,

My research and study are really coming together, and it's a great feeling. Your quilt repays plenty of study.

I would like to publish some of my work on it, and would like your permission to do so. The first introduction the public will have to the quilt is in my illustrated presentation which is tentatively titled "Common Threads: Stories Told by Adirondack Quilts." I will be giving that first in Canton, NY, in March as part of an exhibit of other quilts mounted by Traditional Arts in Upstate New York. I'll also be doing the presentation as part of the museum's Monday Evening Lecture series this summer, to a quilt guild in Remsen, a historical society in Thurman, and as part of our Fiber Arts Festival in September.

I'm also re-working the research for articles in Adirondack Life (contracted), Quilter's Newsletter, and Piecework (submissions). I'd also like to submit an article just on this quilt to Uncoverings, which is the Journal of the American Quilt Study Group and the most respected journal in the field. If I present this right, it will really be a contribution to quilt studies. Please let me know if you have any reservations about any of this. And thank you so much for your help this far!

Assuming all this is a "go," would you like me to reference the piece as in a private collection, or to use your name? And if the latter, is "Paula Bruno Zidel" the way you want to be known?
Of course all the questions are not answered....do you know anything about Uncle Joseph's ethnic background? As you probably know, one of the senior state assemblymen in NY is Joe Bruno, who is of Italian heritage. But the Brunos' in the 1900 census for Johnsburg were both from Vermont, with French Canadian parents.

The fun goes on!

Hallie

Hallie E. Bond, Curator
Adirondack Museum
Blue Mountain Lake, NY

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Adirondack Museum - Heavenly Twins Block

The museum curator Hallie Bond sent me the most interesting e-mail yesterday.  It's intriguing in that she found a book entitled "The Heavenly Twins" ... apparently, a very early feminist book...and there is one block on the quilt also titled "The Heavenly Twins".  History may be revealing itself and this quilt certainly is speaking to us!

> From: hebond@adkmuseum.org
> Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2008 17:09:50 -0500
> Subject: RE: Bruno quilt
 
Dear Paula,

I'm really looking forward to seeing the quilt in person at
last--thank you so much for lending it to us, and for including all that extra material--that will make a wonderful story. I just got a copy of a book published the year before your quilt was made called "The Heavenly Twins--" it's an early feminist novel (!!). I'll let you know if it has any clues about the quilt and the reading public of North River.
 
Hallie



Dear Hallie,

I was so excited to find the picture of my great uncle Joseph in his chef's apron that was just the icing on the cake, at least for me; I found that one late last night.  The people, in the picture(s), names are on the backs of the pictures.  I've included pictures of my great uncle in his Odd Fellows Uniform, a studio 'tin-type' picture of my great uncle, as well as a few other family pictures.  Doris was kind enough to send me copies of pictures of the original Hotel showing the stagecoach parked in front, just like the oil painting of the stagecoach on the quilt and I am enclosing those as well.

My heart jumped when I read of the book you found "The Heavenly Twins".  How odd everything is seemingly "piecing together", just like a quilt, in more ways than I imagined (if the book has any relative information). As I sit here shaking my head .. who would imagine that title for a book and hand written on one of the quilt blocks "Heavenly Twins"...eerie I say...LOL

This quilt seems to hold more historical value than I ever imagined (at least to me) one quilt could.  But they say 'quilts talk' and this quilt truly is telling us a story of the early days in the Adirondack mountains from a logging camp to Hotel (pre Saratoga Springs according to my father, but...).  I'd like to know if it truly was a "Resort" which is probably something I could ask Doris not sure I have anything in my notes relative to that I'd have to re-read them, but right now I need to go to bed.

 

Adirondack Museum

This is the e-mail I initially received from the Curator at the Adirondack Museum in Blue Lake Mountain, NY.  The quilt is finally on it's way to the museum, left yesterday afternoon (11-10-08).

Dear Ms. Zidel,

Doris Patton, Town of Johnsburg historian, gave me your name
yesterday when I visited her to learn more about the Johnsburg calico mill.

I'm the curator of an upcoming exhibit at the Adirondack Museum entitled "Common Threads: 150 Years of Adirondack Quilts and Comforters." She thought I might be interested in the appliqued summer spread you own. I certainly was!

I have never seen anything like it in this region, and very few even similar pieces in my researches in other areas. Would it be possible for you to send me a set of the photos you sent Doris so I could print them out on photo paper and add them to my files? You and Doris have done an admirable job of researching the background, and she shared that with me.

Would you consider loaning the spread to the Adirondack Museum for the exhibit, which will run from next May through October? I realize that it is extremely valuable, both in monetary terms and in historical value to your family, and I assure you we would take good care of it. We have a conservator on staff who will be helping mount the exhibit. I can send you a copy of our facility report that we send to other museums when we borrow objects for display, which we do periodically--from Hudson River School paintings to boats.

I look forward to hearing from you.
 
Sincerely yours,
 
Hallie E. Bond, Curator
Adirondack Museum

Friday, October 31, 2008

Quilt History & Museum

http://www.quilthistory.com/
Delve into the history of quilt making. There is an extensive listing of Quilt Museums across the United States.