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Quilt center set to open Sunday

Jenna Gibson

Issue date: 3/24/08 Section: News
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On Sunday the public will get its first chance to explore the exhibitions at the International Quilt Study Center & Museum, a newly completed building on East Campus.

The center will be open from 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., with free admission.

Visitors can choose to discover the museum on their own or get an audio tour for $2.

They can also choose whether to head straight up to the exhibit hall or stay downstairs and explore something called the "virtual gallery."

The virtual gallery is a room that uses Web-based technology to help visitors interact with a virtual time line of quilting history, design their own quilt pattern and quilt collection online. The gallery also allows guests to view any quilt in the database, full-sized or larger, on a projection screen on the wall.

Other features of the gallery include two recording booths, where people can record quilt stories, which will be digitally taped and catalogued in the center's archive.

"This is much about letting people touch it, feel it and be part of it. … Their story becomes a very important part of the collection here," said Maureen Ose, communications coordinator for the center. "It will really give people a chance to feel part of the museum."

Visitors can then head up the brightly lit staircase to the exhibition hall.

The first exhibitions on display in the new building are "Quilts in Common" and "Nancy Crow: Cloth, Culture, Context."

"Quilts in Common" features collections of groups of three quilts that have one similar element. For example, one group contains an Amish quilt, a French quilt and a contemporary quilt, each using colored squares prominently. Along with the trio is a painting by Josef Albers, which also features a square. The exhibit is meant to show correlation between works of art from across time and countries.

"I think that people will really look at quilts and quilting differently after they see this," Ose said.

The other exhibition will feature quilts by Nancy Crow, including a piece of her design wall, where she lays out plans for her work.
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