Abstraction and colour. Those are the buzzwords designating the salient charactistics of Amish quilts, which remind anyone looking at them of modern painting, be it Josef Albers, Barnett Newman or Frank Stella. Diamonds and bars - lozenges, squares, elongated rectangles - fiery red, vivid green, smokey blue, purple... With their stringent geometry, broad colour fields and astringent composition, Amish quilts are startlingly close to Concrete art, Hard-Edge painting and Minimalism. However, the modern appearance of these patchwork quilts stemmed from the design intention of an 18th-century Anabaptist Christian denomination that has chosen to live without the benefit of modern technology in relative isolation. Although the Amish quilts in the collection date from the reign of Queen Victoria and the Jugendstil/Art Nouveau and Art Deco periods, they represent the diametric opposite of synchronous European-inspired American art yet prefigure the design principles of Modernism. Europeans began to discove
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Flaming red diamonds and sky-blue bars against pulsing pink: the eye vibrates; the stringent composition, the generous arrangement of colours over wide spaces and geometric forms are reminiscent of Josef Albers, Victor Vasarely and Barnett Newman. Minimal art or Colour Field painting? Even though they date from the era of Queen Victoria, Jugendstil and Art Déco, Amish quilts reveal startlingly close affinities with 1960s Concrete art. Hence they are the diametrical opposite of the European and European-shaped American art of the day in that they anticipate Modernist design principles far ahead of their time.
The "modern" appearance of these pieced quilts is, however, not the brainchild of a particularly progressive avant-garde. On the contrary, they reflect the ideas on domestic design entertained by the Amish people who had emigrated to America chiefly from Alsace-Lorraine, an Anabaptist group that deliberately chose an old-fashioned lifestyle, isolated from the rest of 19th-century America. Inspired by their non-Amish neighbours, however, they began to make quilts and soon arrived at the extraordinarily astringent language of colour and form that today not only permits instant identification of these works as Amish but also accurate attribution to specific Amish communities.
The Amish quilt was, unsurprisingly, not discovered by Europeans until the 1960s. After all, the number of authentic Amish pieces is very limited indeed; there are far fewer Amish quilts from before the mid-20th century than there are patchwork quilts made by non-Amish in the US. No wonder that Amish quilts are by now changing hands at record prices.
With consistency and passion, Maria Schlumberger - encouraged by the high-profile FER Collection amassed by her partner, Friedrich E. Rentschler (Conceptual art and 1960s Minimalism) - has built up one of the finest Amish quilt collections in the world. Arnoldsche Art Publishers are honouring this superlative collection on the occasion of a large-scale exhibition at the Neue Sammlung, Munich, and soon also at the ZKM, Karlsruhe, with a comprehensive and lavishly presented publication. A double-page colour illustration is devoted to each quilt and each catalogue entry is extensively annotated. Accompanying essays by distinguished experts - generously illustrated by stunning detail photos - place Amish quilts in the art historical and cultural context of their time and ours.
A sumptuous book, that not only makes the hearts of collectors and art historians beat faster. Very simply, it makes for enthralling reading and is a feast for the eyes for all those who are fascinated by the power of colour in textiles and abstract art.
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Seller: Buchparadies Rahel-Medea Ruoss, Winterthur, ZH, Switzerland
gebundene Ausgabe, 215 S., 32 cm, Einband leicht bestossen und mit feinen Kratzern, die ersten paar Seiten gewellt, sonst gutes Ex. Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 3000. Seller Inventory # 138820
Quantity: 1 available
Seller: Librairie Le Trait d'Union sarl., TROYES, France
Stuttgart, Arnoldsche, 2007. Grand in-4, cartonnage d?éditeur ill. sous jaquette en couleurs, 213 pp. (texte bilingue allemand-anglais), ill. en couleurs, 74 notices. Bibliogr., index. Etude sur les décors géométriques des patchworks Amish, depuis l?ère victorienne jusque dans les années 30. /92F Jaquette un peu salie, bon état intérieur. Hardcover, dust jacket slightly soiled. Good condition. Seller Inventory # 568764
Quantity: 1 available
Seller: Mooney's bookstore, Den Helder, Netherlands
Condition: Very good. Seller Inventory # E-9783897902626-2-2
Quantity: 1 available