Habits of Mind

  • Develop Grit

Repeating Patterns

Discussion through works of art encourage how to approach ambiguous and complex ideas, thoughts, and feelings. The MFAH offers a democratic space where students and teachers can develop, practice and articulate these habits of mind. Remember that the quality of the conversation is what is important, not finding the artist’s “answer.” Slow down and take the time to make careful observations. Talk about what you notice, and try to avoid jumping to conclusions and interpretations. Be sure to give enough time for silent looking and thinking.

Curriculum Objectives

•  Display understanding of numbers by counting.

•  Classify objects by shape and pattern.

•  Use data to construct a graph

GRADE LEVELS


SUBJECT AREA


HABIT OF MINDS

  • Study the quilt. Create descriptive names for the designs on each block. Group the designs into categories such as eagles, cornucopias, and vases of flowers. Develop names for other categories

  •  Assign a number to each of the categories listed above.

  •  Create a 5-square chart. Carefully observing the quilt, place numbers on the chart corresponding to the design categories and their placement on the quilt.  Count the number of times each design repeats. Which design repeats the most? The least?

  •  Are the designs in each category exactly the same?  How are they alike?  How do they vary?

  • Create a graph to record the number of designs found.

  • Study the quilt.  Name the designs on each block.  Group designs into categories such as vases of flowers, eagles, etc.  Develop names for other categories.

  • Certain motifs found here are common in this type of quilts; a central square and a wicker basket of flowers, vases of flowers, and fruits in compotes. Can you spot a square with a more unusual element?

  • Look at and describe the different patterns in this work.

  • Discuss how repetition gives unity and balance to the quilt.  Are there any other elements (color, line, etc.) that repeat?

  • What elements provide unity and what elements give a sense of motion?

  • What is the effect of the white band around the patterns? And the red and green outlines?

  • How quilts are made?


  • How do you think this object was used? Is it functional or decorative or both?

  • This type of quilt is called an album quilt. Album quilts consist of squares laid out in horizontal and vertical rows, and were made to honor an individual, to commemorate an important event, to celebrate a wedding, or to present as a gift to a special friend. Explain what the word ‘album’ could mean in this context.

  • An album quilt can express feelings like friendship, love, admiration. What feeling do you think this quilt expresses? Why? Is it cheerful or sad, light or serious?

  • The red star and small text next to it give away the theme of this quilt. What might that theme be?

  • The quilt celebrates Texas joining the union as a state in 1845.  The square in the second row at the far right is decorated with a red star (the Lone Star) and the word “Texas”, surrounded by two sprays of oak leaves.  The squares with eagles and cornucopias continue the patriotic theme. Do you know why the work is called ‘Baltimore Album Quilt’?

  • Most album quilts were made in Baltimore, Maryland.  Baltimore was a center of the Methodist Church in America and during the 1840s and 1850s many new churches were founded.  Sewing circles at Methodist churches made not only clothes and bed coverings for the poor, but also many of the album quilts. Do you think this quilt was made by one person or more people? Why?

  • The creation of a quilt was a group effort.  Each woman contributed a block to the quilt and often signed it with her name. 

  • What about the fact that this quilt is displayed on a wall in a museum? How does this quilt differ from quilts that you have come across before?





Album quilts were made to honor an individual, to commemorate an important event, to celebrate a wedding, or to present as a gift to a special friend.  A quilt can thus express friendship, love, or admiration.  Album quilts consist of squares laid out in horizontal and vertical rows.

 

This quilt has a patriotic theme that celebrates Texas’s joining the union as a state in 1845.  The square in the second row at the far right is decorated with a red star (the Lone Star) and the word “Texas”, surrounded by two sprays of oak leaves.  The squares with eagles and cornucopias continue the patriotic theme.  Other motifs found here are common in album quilts; a central square and a wicker basket of flowers, vases of flowers, and fruits in compotes.

 

This quilt is characterized by elaborate decoration, painstaking craftsmanship, and vivid designs.  The twenty-five squares are laid out in rows and separated by sashes with diamond-shaped patterns that emphasize the design of each square.  The asymmetrical arrangement of motifs adds to the liveliness of the quilt.  The repeated colors and forms and the pattern of the stitching add to the dynamism and complexity of the quilt’s design. 

 

Each square in this quilt has an appliquéd design.  Pieces of fabric are cut, then sewn down onto a solid-colored fabric.  The quilt top, the area with the elaborate pattern, is stitched to an inner layer of cotton or wool, and a backing of plain fabric.  The entire quilt was tea-stained, resulting in the light tan color of the background cloth.  This technique softened and blended the quilt’s colors.

 

The creation of a quilt was a group effort.  Each woman contributed a block to the quilt and often signed it with her name.  However, today it is difficult to attribute the quilts to specific individuals.  Most album quilts were made in Baltimore, Maryland.  Baltimore was a center of the Methodist Church in America and during the 1840s and 1850s many new churches were founded.  Sewing circles at Methodist churches made not only clothes and bed coverings for the poor, but also many of the album quilts.

 

The term “album” indicates that these quilts are related to the nineteenth-century remembrance or autograph album.  “The practice of giving individual blocks for quilts with the idea of having the whole recall friends to the owner, had its counterpart in the autograph album”. 1  These volumes contained collections of sentimental verse and drawings, religious homilies, artfully framed signatures, and elaborate endearments.

 

  1. Dena S. Katzenberg, Baltimore Album Quilts (Baltimore:The Baltimore Museum of Art, 1981), p. 13.


The Learning Through Art program is endowed by Melvyn and Cyvia Wolff.

The Learning Through Art curriculum website is made possible in part by a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

All Learning and Interpretation programs at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, receive endowment income from funds provided by the Louise Jarrett Moran Bequest; Caroline Wiess Law; the William Randolph Hearst Foundation; The National Endowment for the Humanities; the Fondren Foundation; BMC Software, Inc.; the Wallace Foundation; the Neal Myers and Ken Black Children’s Art Fund; the Favrot Fund; and Gifts in honor of Beth Schneider