Lucy Mooney

Lucy Mooney (c. 1880 – 1969) was an American artist. She is associated with the Gee's Bend quilting collective and worked for the Freedom Quilting Bee.[1] Despite losing an arm before she began working at the Bee, she was an accomplished quilter. Pete Seeger owned one of her quilts.[2] Her work has been exhibited in the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and the Frist Art Museum.[3]

Life

Mooney and her husband Needom worked as domestic attendants to the Sandy Hill house, the former Van de Graaff plantation in Gee's Bend. W.C. Travis was their employer in residence at the time.[3]

gollark: Before I try and make a somewhat insane workaround for this, does anyone know a way to recolor an SVG image in an HTML document?
gollark: *is libertarian center-ish*
gollark: I was just saying that those were weird too.
gollark: SIMD is even more weird and specific on x86. Especially AVX-512, because Intel seems to randomly implement different subsets of that on their different products.
gollark: They seem quite cool, but cost about six times as much as my computer did, so meh.

References

  1. Rubin, Susan Goldman. 2017. The Quilts of Gee's Bend. New York: Abrams. p. 29.
  2. Callahan, Nancy. 2014. The Freedom Quilting Bee : Folk Art and the Civil Rights Movement. Alabama: Fire Ant Books.
  3. "Lucy Mooney | Souls Grown Deep Foundation". www.soulsgrowndeep.org. Retrieved 2019-04-22.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.