Friendship Quilt

Description

Inscribed with names and verses, the eighty-five unique squares of this quilt bear signs of friendship and community. Made in an era when communication and travel required significant time and effort, the quilt may have served as a farewell gift on the eve of the recipient's marriage and ensuing move. In one square, an M. C. Coles simply wrote Remember me. In another, Martha Buzby composed a short poem: Oft in tender recollection / Call to mind thine absent friend / Cherish for her that affection / Which I trust will never end. These clever, succinctly rendered compositions add a metaphorical layer of coziness to the quilt and allowed Deacon to keep those dear always near.

Provenance

Ella Maria Deacon (1811-1894), Mount Holly, New Jersey, 1842 [inscribed lower center]; by descent within the family to Betsey Leeds Tait Puth (1929-2024), Winnetka, IL, by Sept. 26, 1978 [according to research on the family conducted by Becca Fenstermaker, Oct. 10, 2023; copy in curatorial object file]; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1978.

Friendship Quilt

Ella Maria Deacon

1842

Accession Number

54071

Medium

Appliquéd and pieced quilt; dyed and printed plain weave cotton fabrics; ink inscriptions

Dimensions

264.7 × 272.6 cm (104 1/8 × 107 3/8 in.)

Classification

textile

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Betsey Leeds Tait Puth