Jazz, like quilting, is a woven art form. Both genres produce textural harvests spun from the life fibers of masters of the imagination who create for our contemplation. Quiltmaking, as in jazz, evokes a host of complex rhythms and moods. Some quilt artists listen to jazz music while working on their quilts because the one form of artistic inspiration ignites in the other. When the two forms connect, the creative energy explodes exponentially. Textural Rhythms: Quilting the Jazz Tradition releases both the individual particles and the synergistic power of this explosion. The 83 quilts pictured include traditional, improvisational, and art quilts from some of the countries best known African American quilters. Textural Rhythms: Quilting the Jazz Tradition unite the two most well known, and popular artistic forms in African American culture jazz and quilts. These quilt artists have harnessed in cloth the spirit of jazz, and let us feel, hear, and see jazz music.
Carolyn Mazloomi is among the most influential African American quilt historians and quilt artists of the twenty-first century. Her desire to tell the African American experience in cloth fueled her exploration in appliqué and narrative quilts. Consistent with the African American folklore tradition of storytelling, Mazloomi is a "fabric griot."
She frequently creates in series form to convey the multiple stories within her chosen subject - the Goddess series to explore the power of women, the Jazz series to connect her spirit and soul to the importance of music in her life, the War and Peace series to voice her opposition to the horrors inflicted by war, and the Ancestors Series to honor those who paved the way. Mazloomi's quilts evoke the warmth of family, the celebration of life, and the realities of social and racial injustice. Widely exhibited in the United States and internationally, Mazloomi's quilts can be found in the Smithsonian American Museum of Art, the National Afro-American Museum and Cultural Center, the National Civil Rights Museum, the Mint Museum of Craft and Design, the American Museum of Art and design, and the Wadsworth Museum.
In 1985 Mazloomi founded the Women of Color Quilters Network (which includes men), to promote inclusiveness in African American quilt making. As a veteran 1960's political activist, Mazloomi believes art should make people think about such historical and social conditions as slavery, and the treatment of dispossessed peoples throughout the world. She considers quilts "visual soul food" and a spiritual experience for the viewer. In addition to her artistic contributions to African American folk art, Mazloomi organizes African American quilters through a national outreach program to educate them about the cultural significance and monetary value of their artistic contributions, and to acknowledge their role as primary transmitters of cultural, political, social, and spiritual values.
In 1998 Mazloomi published Spirits of the Cloth: Contemporary African American Quilts to provide important insight into the narrative works of contemporary African American quilters. Her ethnographic interviews with the quilt makers, whose works appear in the book, give them a voice to tell their own stories. The study constitutes a challenge to scholars who without intending to denigrate African American quilters nevertheless adversely impacted the black community of quilt makers because their narrowly defined criteria for African American quilt aesthetics excluded the larger more diverse body of works. Mazloomi's work gave other African American "fabric griots" an opportunity to express ties to Africa, familial memories, healing and sacred connections, social and political protests, spiritual praises, and black female empowerment. Mazloomi's scholarship forces others to rethink notions of African American quilts and the black aesthetic.
In 2004 her second major text was published with Patricia Pongracz, Threads of Faith: Recent Works from the Women of Color Quilters Network. This catalog is a powerful testament to the spiritual connection some African American quilters make between their quilts and the process of quilt making itself. The quilts and the quilters are exemplary of the diversity of artistic styles within the African American community. Mazloomi captures the multiple ways in which these quilters demonstrate that quilts exceeding the narrow parameters of some scholars are produced in equal numbers, and particularly by members of the Women of Color Quilters Network, nearly 1,000 quilters strong. The book examines contemporary African American quilts inspired by faith, the Bible, and American Christian traditions that dispel longstanding religious misrepresentations and misunderstandings of African American Christian beliefs. It also focuses on giving individual and collective voices to the quilters to express the particulars of their creative process and what quilting means to them. Critical analyses of the quilts inform a broader understanding of the spiritual, social, political, and cultural intersections the quilters make with their internal communities and the larger external environment of American society.
In 2007 Mazloomi wrote a book that links two traditional African American art forms, jazz and quilts. A traveling exhibition based on her book, Textural rhythms: Constructing the Jazz Tradition will travel the United States through 2011. Celebrating visionary female artists was the theme of National Women's History Month in 2008. In honor of the occasion Mazloomi curated and wrote a catalogue for the exhibition Quilting African American Women's History: Our Challenges, Creativity, and Champions. The exhibition opened at the National Afro-American Museum and Cultural Center in historic Wilberforce, Ohio and is currently touring the country.
In 2009 she wrote The Journey of Hope in America: Quilts Inspired by President Barack Obama. The exhibition opened in Yokohama, Japan and then the National Afro-American Museum in Wilberforce, Ohio. The exhibition will tour the United States for two years.
Carolyn Mazloomi was awarded the first Ohio Heritage Fellowship Award in 2003. Ohio Heritage Fellows are among the state's living cultural treasures. Fellows embody the highest level of artistic achievement in their work, and the highest level of service in the teaching and other work they do in their communities to ensure that their artistic traditions stay strong. Mazloomi has been involved in the economic development of women through the arts for over twenty years. Her organization, WCQN, has been recognized by the International Labour Department in Geneva and the United Nations for its developmental programs to help advance women.
More than ever before African American quilt making is recognized as a traditional art form that investigates and preserves the life, the spirit, and the culture of a people. Mazloomi's gifts to folklore include brilliant artistic works and perhaps more importantly, her tenacity to insure that other African American quilters have the opportunity to impart their knowledge of African and European modern art, popular culture, and history through their quilts.
