Event Schedule
For 2009
April - June
July - September
October - December
January March
ISQC Exhibit
Schedule |
Jan 24-25, 2009 |
► The St.
Cecilia Cathedral Flower Show
10 am to 4 pm, Saturday, January 24 and
1 pm to 4 pm on Sunday, January 25, 2009
St. Cecilia Cathedral
701 North 40th Street
402-551-2313
Can you imagine
12 – 15,000 visitors to a quilt show? That’s how
many will be at the 27th annual Cathedral
flower show in 2009. The florists are very excited
about designing their arrangements to compliment one
of the 40 quilts they’ve been given to highlight. A
show this large needs LOTS of volunteers. If you are
coming to the show anyway, and can spare an extra
hour or two to be a docent/white glover to answer
questions about the quilts and kept the crowds
moving, we can put you to good use. The show is FREE
on Sat. and Sun. There is Candlelight viewing of the
floral displays and companion quilts on Fri, Jan 23
from 7 PM to 9 PM that you may attend for a $10.00
donation; no reservations are needed. Hours on Sat.
are 10 AM – 4 PM and then again on Sat. from 7 PM to
9 PM. ON Sun, the show is from 1 PM – 4 PM. We need
volunteers for ALL shifts on all 3 days. Contact
Teri Quinn at 393-3035 or
teriSEWandSOW@aol.com if you can help. Look for
more information in the OWH as we get closer to show
dates. The flower festival will highlight a
different genre of art next year, so this will be
the only year you will be able to see the flowers
and quilts combined. All the quilts are from local
artists so don’t miss it!

The following will be offered during
the Flower Show
WEAVING HOPE INTO THE
FABRIC OF OUR LIVES:
Spiritual Lessons through
Quilting Using quilt imagery, our
presenter will help us find the sacredness of
the ordinary in our lives. She will demonstrate
how our lives are pieced together by the daily
events that make us who we are. Discussion will
include dealing with imperfections, reconciling
a “ragged” life and leaving a warm legacy of
love. This workshop will occur during the 2009
Cathedral Flow Show, “Flowers and Quilts”. Come
for reflection and spiritual growth.
For Adults: Instruction: Mary Eileen
Andreasen, MS,MA Date: Saturday, January
24, 2009 Time: 10:00 a.m. to Noon Cost: $10
To Register Contact: Joan M. Koneck Wilcox Administrative Dean St. Cecilia Institute 3900 Webster Street Omaha, NE 68131 554-5524, Ext. 1
jmkoneckwilcox@archomaha.org
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►International Quilt Study
Center and Museum University of Nebraska -
Lincoln
Scheduled events and
activities Free with admission unless
otherwise noted
Inspired by Red and
Green- November 14th – January 11th
Chintz Appliqué:
From Imitation to Icon- November 22nd – May 17th
Location:
1523 North 33rd
Street Lincoln, NE (33rd and
Holdrege)
Hours:
Tuesday – Saturday
10:00 AM – 4:30 PM, Sunday 1:00– 4:30 PM
Closed Mondays and
University Holidays: December 24-January 1
Regular
admission: Adults-$5, Students
(ages 5-18)-$3, Children (under 4)-Free
Families-$10- two
household adults with any supervised children.
For more information
please visit
www.quiltstudy.org
or call (402) 472-6549.
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►More about
Activities and Exhibits
What: Quilts tell story of textile fashion,
technology and trade
When: Opens Saturday, November 22, 2208 and runs through May 17,
2009
Where: International Quilt Study Center & Museum, 33rd and Holdrege
Streets, Lincoln, NE USA
Contact: Maureen Ose, 402-472-7232 or mose2@unl.edu
The International Quilt Study Center & Museum
Presents
"Chintz Appliqué: From Imitation to Icon"
On View November 22, 2008 - May 17, 2009
(Lincoln, NE, October 28,2008) The new exhibition
of iconic 19th century quilts traces connections of textile fashion,
technology and trade in "Chintz Appliqué: From Imitation to Icon" at
the International Quilt Study Center & Museum. Inspired by the
painted and printed cottons of India, famous for their lively beauty
and lasting qualities, the stunning colors and artistry of chintz
appliqué quilts made them icons in the nineteenth century. They are
considered among the most beautifully crafted, vibrantly colored and
largest quilts ever made in America. The 21 quilts, circa 1790-1850,
presented in the exhibition organized by Curator of Collections
Carolyn Ducey, give a glimpse into their makers’ lives and society.
"Chintz Appliqué: From Imitation to Icon" will be on view from
November 22, 2008 through May 17, 2009 at the museum on the East
Campus of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
Inventive American and European women imitated the
look of costly Indian textiles by cutting and applying pieces of
chintz to neutral backgrounds. Chintz, polished cotton of verdant
foliage and leaves colored in multiple rich hues, was unlike
anything Europeans had known. Its lustrous beauty evoked visions of
strange cultures and unknown lands. Challenges in international
trade, trade imbalances and consumer demands mark the story of the
chintz evolution.
Printed cottons came to Europe from India, first
as a novelty, used initially as barter in the three-way trade for
spices in the late 1500s. The overwhelming popularity of these
printed cottons strained the important wool and silk markets in
England and France in the final years of the seventeenth century,
leading to government bans on Indian imports in Great Britain. At
the same time, European manufacturers tried to meet the high demand
for printed cotton fabrics by mastering the complex dyeing methods.
New mechanized processes led to faster and less expensive cotton
spinning, weaving and printing. By the time trade restrictions were
relaxed in the mid-1770s, British manufacturers had cornered the
market, effectively eliminating India from the trade.
American chintz appliqué quilts were almost
exclusively constructed of British printed fabrics. The British
maintained tight control of chintz production until the 1830s when
the United States became a player in the cotton printing industry.
Chintz appliqué quilts were made during a period of marked changes
in all aspects of American society. Family-oriented rural
communities, in which most of life’s necessities were produced by a
family’s own labor, were altered as families moved to urban centers
and took on factory jobs. Manufactured goods became plentiful and
affordable and paychecks provided the means to purchase fashionable
items. Textile markets boomed and change appeared in the fabric of
American lives. This exhibition explores one aspect of that pivotal
time in America’s history.
The quilts on display come from America’s Eastern
seaboard, including pieces from the Delaware Bay area of
Philadelphia and Baltimore, and others from Virginia and the
Carolinas. They are drawn primarily from the center’s Ardis and
Robert James Collection and the Byron and Sara Rhodes Dillow
Collection. Funding for this exhibition and related programming was
generously provided by the Robert and Ardis James Foundation. The
May 1, 2009 lecture by Rosemary Crill, Senior Curator at Britain’s
prestigious Victoria and Albert Museum, is the first of the
International Lectureship Series supported by the Byron and Sara
Rhodes Dillow Excellence Fund. A 64 page, full-color monograph of
the exhibition is available for purchase.
The International Quilt Study Center & Museum was
founded in 1997 and is now the home of the largest publicly held
quilt collection in the world. The museum opened in its new location
in 2008. The privately-funded, glass and brick "green" building
houses more than 2,300 quilts, as well as state-of-the-art research
and storage space, and custom-crafted galleries. The new facility
enhances the center’s ability to pursue its mission to collect,
preserve, study, exhibit, and promote discovery of quilts and
quiltmaking traditions from many cultures, countries, and times. For
information on hours and admission visit
www.quiltstudy.org
or call 402-472-6549. NOTE: The museum will be closed from December
24, 2008 through January 1, 2009.
► Scheduled
events and activities from January – February 2009:
Free with admission unless
otherwise noted
Friday, January 2nd
5:00 – 7:00 PM:
First Friday Free Admission
Sunday, January 11th
1:00 – 4:30 PM: Last
day of “Inspired by Red and Green” exhibition
Tuesday, January 13th
12:00 – 1:00 PM:
Tuesday Talk: “Chintz” with curator Carolyn Ducey
Friday, January 16th
10:00 AM: New
Exhibition Opens: “Yikes! Stripes” curated by graduate student
Elizabeth Andrews
Saturday, January 24th
10:00 AM – 12:00 PM:
Educator’s Open House-free admission with teacher ID
10:00 AM – 1:00 PM:
Quiltmaking Demonstration: Stripes and Bars
Friday, February 6th
5:00 – 7:00 PM:
First Friday Free Admission
Saturday, February 7th
10:00 AM – 1:00 PM:
Quilt Identification Day, Reservations required,
$10 per
quilt, $8 per quilt for museum members; (402) 472-6549
Tuesday, February 10th
12:00 – 1:00 PM:
Tuesday Talk: “Yikes! Strips” by curator Elizabeth Andrews
Saturday, February 28th
10:00 AM – 1:00 PM:
Quiltmaking Demonstration: Chintz Appliqué
Standing Activities:
Free with admission
Every Wednesday: Guided tour
of Exhibitions, 11:00 AM
Every Saturday: Guided tour of Exhibitions, 11:00 AM and 1:00 PM
Ongoing Exhibitions:
“Inspired by Red and Green”
- November 14th – January 11th
“Chintz Appliqué: From
Imitation to Icon” - November 22nd– May 17th
“Yikes! Stripes” - January
16th – April 5th
Location:
1523 North 33rd
Street Lincoln, NE
(33rd and
Holdrege)
Hours:
Tuesday – Saturday 10:00 AM
– 4:30 PM, Sunday 1:00– 4:30 PM
Closed Mondays
Regular admission:
Adults-$5, Students (ages
5-18)-$3, Children (under 4)-Free
Families-$10- two household
adults with any supervised children.
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► Chintz Appliqué Demonstrations, Free with
admission Saturdays, November 22, 2008 and February 28, 2009, 10:00
am -1:00 pm
►Tuesday Talks – Chintz topics, Free with
admission Tuesdays, January 13, 2009 and March 17, 2009, Noon
►Chintz Appliqué Workshop, led by NQA-certified
teacher Kriss Moulds, registration required Saturdays, March 7, 14,
and 21, 2009, 10:30 am -12:30 pm
Cost: $50 members, $55 non-members (materials
included)
►Chintz Family Day, activities for the whole
family based on the exhibition, Free with admission Saturday, March
21, 2009 10:00 am -1:00 pm
►Lecture "Chintz: Indian Textiles for the
West" by Rosemary Crill, Senior Curator in the Asian department at
the Victoria and Albert Museum in Great Britain, Free admission,
underwritten by the Byron and Sara Rhodes Dillow Excellence Fund
Friday, May 1, 2009, 5:30 pm
►Guided Tours
Public guided tours of Chintz Appliqué: From
Imitation to Icon are available on Wednesdays at 11:00 am and
Saturdays at 11:00 am and 1:00 pm. These tours are free with
admission. Reserved guided tours for groups of 10 or more are
available during public hours. Please schedule at least four weeks
in advance. Call 402-472-6579 or email iqsc-tours@unlnotes.unl.edu.
Audio guides of the exhibition are available on a first-come,
first-served basis for $2 per unit.
The International Quilt Study Center is an
academic program of the Department of Textiles, Clothing and Design
in the College of Education and Human Sciences at the University of
Nebraska--Lincoln. For information on this and other programs, log
on to
www.unl.edu
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