Record Details
Center Star Quilt
A whole-cloth quilt is not made from a single piece of fabric, as the name might imply; it simply means that the quilt is made from fabric of a single color. Although this bedcover has a pieced star in the center, it is categorized as part of the whole-cloth tradition because of its large size, early date, and the fact that it is made of large pieces of glazed wool, known as calimanco, in a center-medallion format. This textile exhibits the elaborate quilting motifs typically associated with calimanco quilts, including palmettes like those seen in the Indigo Calimanco Quilt. The meandering vine that frames the four sides is virtually identical to the quilted border in the Tree of Life Whitework Quilt. Although the Center Star Quilt was made slightly later than the whitework quilt, they share several additional quilting motifs, including pomegranates. These bedcovers, however, do not share a single pattern; instead, they draw upon design conventions of the period. But the deep, saturated colors of this bedcover root it in the past, while the whitework participates in the neoclassical taste that emerged at the turn of the century, breaking the visual unification that had characterized the decorative arts in New England for nearly two centuries.
Stacy C. Hollander, "Center Star Quilt," in American Anthem: Masterworks from the American Folk Art Museum (New York: Harry N. Abrams in association with American Folk Art Museum, 2001), 299.