The Influential Quiltmakers of Gee's Bend Are Now on Etsy
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The inspired quiltmakers of Gees Bend turned a rural riverside community in Alabama into a highly influential destination for those interested in the confluence of heritage craft and contemporary art-making. The area is isolated by a topographic turn of the Alabama River that makes the town all but an island, and is largely populated by descendants of freed enslaved people who once worked on the local Pettway plantation many still bear Pettway as their surname. Through their ingenuity, artistry, and skills of improvisation, generations of Black female fiber artists have made the name Gees Bend synonymous with quiltmaking; theyve also collectively authored an oft-elided chapter of art history and carried it into the present day.
For Nest, a nonprofit dedicated to the support and expansion of the handworker economy, with an emphasis on women workers and their wellbeing, the quiltmakers of Gees Bend are natural partners. Their collaboration began in 2019, with information-gathering sessions that revealed a desire on the part of quilters to have better access to platforms that could help scale up awareness and sales of their works. Since featuring the quilters in the Makers United Craft Marketplace in Birmingham, as well as offering e-commerce and marketing support, Nest has enabled over $100,000 of additional income for the Gees Bend quilters, according to a press release announcing their newest initiative in partnership with Etsy and Souls Grown Deep.
Launching on February 1, in honor of Black History Month, each of nine Gees Bend quilters is premiering their own shop-in-shop on Etsys main site. As part of this ongoing partnership, Etsy made a $50,000 grant to Nest to provide the Gees Bend quilters with the resources and education needed to open up their own individual Etsy shops.