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"Housetop"—sixteen-block "Half-Log Cabin" variation sashed with feed sacks

Rachel Carey George1930s

Souls Grown Deep

Souls Grown Deep
Atlanta, United States

The most popular pattern in Gee’s Bend, the “housetop" begins with a central solid medallion of cloth around which rectangular strips are joined, long end to short, creating a frame around the center motif, a square within a square. Hence, Rachel Carey George quarters the squares, adding a lyrical whimsy to this otherwise traditional quilt. Made in the midst of the Great Depression, a time in history when Gee’s Bend's Wilcox County was one of the poorest in the country, the practical employment of pieces of any fabric handy becomes particularly poignant when those scraps come from empty feed sacks. Created on the cusp of Alabama's transition from a predominantly agricultural society to an industrialized one, this quilt materially and metaphorically maps the declining agricultural lifestyle of which George was once a part.

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  • Title: "Housetop"—sixteen-block "Half-Log Cabin" variation sashed with feed sacks
  • Creator: Rachel Carey George
  • Creator Lifespan: 1908/2011
  • Creator Nationality: American
  • Creator Gender: Female
  • Date Created: 1930s
  • Physical Location: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Museum purchase and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation
  • Location Created: Gee's Bend, Alabama
  • Physical Dimensions: 86 x 86 in. (218 x 218 cm)
  • Subject Keywords: Gee's Bend, Black art, African American art
  • Type: Quilt
  • Rights: © Rachel Carey George / Photo: Stephen Pitkin, Pitkin Studio
  • External Link: https://www.soulsgrowndeep.org/artist/rachel-carey-george
  • Medium: Cotton sacking material and dress fabric
Souls Grown Deep

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