Crafting Utopia: The Art of Shaker Women
“These items are not only beautifully made under their deceptively simple surfaces, they are also—to put it as simply as possible—labors of love.”
– D. Eric Bookhardt, Best of New Orleans
“A palpable feeling of peace emanates from…‘Crafting Utopia: The Art of Shaker Women.’”
– Julie Jenson, The Dispatch and The Rock Island Argus
Founded in the 1770s in Manchester, England, the Shakers were a progressive religious sect (a celibate offshoot of the Quakers) whose communal villages and handmade furnishings and tools exemplified their utopian ideals: purity, utility, self-sufficiency, and sexual and racial equality. Immigrating to America in the 1780s, the Shakers flourished in the vast spaces and freedoms of the new country, founding communities in New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Maine, Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana. Their furniture, tools, craftworks, architecture, and other artifacts—expressions of their austere religiosity and love of simple utility—are highly regarded for their purity of line, harmony of construction, ingenious design, and sturdy workmanship.
The Hancock Shaker Village in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, has the largest and most representative collection of Shaker artifacts available to public at an original site. This exhibition featured 115 beautifully crafted objects, including unique woodenware and household objects, costumes, textiles and furnishings. Crafting Utopia focused on the role of women in the Shaker community and their importance in the development of Shaker crafts.
Figge Art Museum, Davenport, IA (previously Davenport Museum of Art)
October 1 – November 26, 2000
Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, GA
September 22 – December 12, 2001
The Mennello Museum of American Art, Orlando, FL
January 10 – March 24, 2002
Newcomb Art Gallery at Tulane University, New Orleans, LA
September 5 – November 17, 2002
Fullerton Museum Center, Fullerton, CA
February 22 – May , 18, 2003
Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, NY
June 14 – September 7, 2003
Naples Museum of Art, Naples, FL
November 1, 2003 – February 1, 2004
Crafting utopia
Quad City Times, by Alma Gaul, September 24, 2000
Shaker crafts viewed as art, history
Des Moines Register, by Mary Challender, October 1, 2000
Simple pleasures: Shaker art on display at Q-C Museum
The Dispatch and The Rock Island Argus, by Julie Jensen, October 8, 2000
Shaker art: It’s simply beautiful
The Dispatch and The Rock Island Argus, by Julie Jensen, November 9, 2000
Crafting Utopia
O! Arts Magazine, January-February 2002
Hewing the Straight and Narrow
TheBestofNewOrleans.com, by D. Eric Bookhardt, October 1, 2002