Juneteenth
The Greeneville Arts Council has been honored to support and participate in the George Clem Multicultural Alliance and the Town of Greeneville's annual Juneteenth celebration. In 2023 and 2024, the Arts Council created a community art project during which Juneteenth attendees could paint sections of canvas inspired by the quilts of Gee's Bend.
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The National Endowment for the Arts writes of the quilts of Gee's Bend:
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"When enslaved women from the rural, isolated community of Boykin, Alabama—better known as Gee’s Bend—began quilting in the 19th century, it arose from a physical need for warmth rather than a quest to reinvent an art form. Yet by piecing together scraps of fabric and clothing, they were creating abstract designs that had never before been expressed on quilts. These patterns and piecing styles were passed down over generations, surviving slavery, the antebellum South, and Jim Crow. During the Civil Rights movement in 1966, the Freedom Quilting Bee was established as a way for African-American women from Gee’s Bend and nearby Rehoboth to gain economic independence. The Bee cooperative began to sell quilts throughout the U.S., gaining recognition for the free-form, seemingly improvisational designs that had long been the hallmark of local quilt design. As awareness grew, so did acclaim, and the quilts entered the lexicon of homegrown of homegrown American art."
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