Loretta Pettway (b. 1942), Four-block strip quilt, c. 1960
Cotton twill and synthetic material (men's clothing), 78 x 73 in.; Baltimore Museum of Art, Museum purchase and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation
In a purely aesthetic sense, the more simplified constructions of the work-clothes quilts provided a blank canvas for experiments with a range of improvisational strategies, including sudden shifts in patterning, broken borders, irregular shapes, asymmetry, syncopation, and dissonant juxtapositions of prints and colors. During the early 1960s, Loretta Pettway created a captivating trilogy of quilts with vastly different and highly imaginative designs, all miraculously rendered from the same dreary batch of men’s clothing scraps.
These images show the entirety of the quilts, including their handmade edges, against a white background.