Skip to main content
Stenciled Quilt
Olivia Dunham Barnes and Dunham family member
Photo courtesy of In the Beginn…
Stenciled Quilt
Stenciled Quilt
Olivia Dunham Barnes and Dunham family member
Photo courtesy of In the Beginn…
Stenciled Quilt Olivia Dunham Barnes and Dunham family member Photo courtesy of In the Beginning Quilts, Inc.
Record Details

Stenciled Quilt

Artist ((1807–1887))
Date1825–1835
MediumPaint on cotton and copperplate-printed cotton
Dimensions83 × 72"
Credit LineGift of In The Beginning-Quilts, Inc., Seattle
Accession number2002.11.1
CopyrightThe American Folk Art Museum believes this work to be in the public domain.
Description

Stenciled bedcovers are relatively rare and appear to have been made primarily in New England and New York State. Their popularity was most prevalent during the second quarter of the nineteenth century, when stenciled decoration adorned the interior walls in many homes, and the art of theorem painting was taught to young women in schools. Such bedcovers most frequently combine stenciled and painted blocks with chintz blocks when they are quilted, as in this example. The quilt features twenty stenciled blocks set on point, alternating with printed blocks in the popular "Pheasant and Tree" design, which was introduced by Bannister Hall in England in 1815. The brilliant colors were probably achieved by a combination of watercolor and dyeing techniques and by the use of chemical compounds. A handwritten note that survived with this quilt states that is was made in Conway, Massachusetts, by Olivia Dunham and her sister, in anticipation of Olivia's marriage to Romulus Barnes of Connecticut. Shortly after their marriage, the couple moved to Illinois. There, the quilt passed through the family as a wedding present for each ensuing generation.

Stacy C. Hollander, "Stenciled Quilt," exhibition label for ALSO ON VIEW: Selections from the Collection. Stacy C. Hollander, curator. New York: American Folk Art Museum, 2014.

Object information is a work in progress and may be updated with new research. Records are reviewed and revised, and the American Folk Art Museum welcomes additional information. 

To help improve this record, please email photoservices@folkartmuseum.org


Double Wedding Ring Quilt
Quiltmaker Unidentified
Photographed by Schecter Lee
Artist unidentified
1945–1955
1993.4.12
Artist unidentified, “Pointing Hands Quilt”, Found in Tennessee, Early 20th Century Various pri…
Artist unidentified
Early 20th century
2020.10.1
Box with Heart Decorations
George Robert Lawton
Photo by Schecter Lee
George Robert Lawton
c. 1842
2013.1.22
Lectern Box: The Rock of Liberty
Artist unidentified
Photo by Stephen Donelian
Artist unidentified
Mid-19th century
2013.1.23
Proud Family
Thornton Dial Sr.
Photo by Adam Reich

© 2016 Estate of Thornton Dial / Artist…
Thornton Dial Sr.
1997
2013.5.4
Mourning Piece for Mrs. Ebenezer Collins
Probably Lovice Collins, c. 1793–1847
South Hadley, …
Lovice Collins
1807
1981.12.8
Mary Lee Bendolph (b. 1935), “Mama's Song”, Gee's Bend, Alabama, 2005, Color acquatint etching,…
Mary Lee Bendolph
2005
2017.23.1
God's Greatest Hits
Sister Gertrude Morgan (1900–1980)
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
…
Sister Gertrude Morgan
n.d.
1998.10.32
God's Greatest Hits
Sister Gertrude Morgan
Photographed by Gavin Ashworth
Sister Gertrude Morgan
n.d.
2000.22.1
Richard Saholt, (1924–2014), “The Chemistry of Madness,” Minneapolis, Minnesota, Late 20th Cent…
Richard Saholt
Late 20th century to early 21st century
2016.1.1
Eveline Meeuwse, (b. 1958), “Hans Krüsi, Zürich, 1978,” Zürich, Switzerland, 2015, Scanned nega…
Eveline Meeuwse
2015
2015.21.1