Thread History: Rosie Lee Tompkins' Quilt Brilliance
Adapted and updated from The Textile Eye Report no. 7- Fall 2020
The Textile Eye on Exhibitions
Rosie Lee Tompkins: A Retrospective, BAMPFA, Berkeley, CA, USA
On February 19th, 2020, a massive retrospective of nearly seventy works by Rosie Lee Tompkins (1936-2006), an accomplished African-American quilt artist, opened at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA). The show was scheduled to run through December, but has been extended through July 18th, 2021 due to a forced COVID closure.
In June, Roberta Smith of The New York Times published an in-depth article on Tompkins, calling her work an exemplar of “African-American improvisational quilt-making” and comparing it to the paintings of Paul Klee. A new awareness of her creations as true pieces of art, encompassing masterful color choices, sharp social commentary, and brilliant composition, is emerging. The Black Lives Matter movement may be partly to thank for this overdue appreciation of artists like Tompkins.
The show and triumphal coverage was only possible due to a historic bequest to BAMPFA by Eli Leon. Leon, a scholar and advocate for African American quilt-making traditions, donated his entire collection of nearly 3000 African-American quilts, including more than 500 by Tompkins, upon his death in 2018. Leon was a close friend and early champion of Tompkins— he purchased any quilt she would sell him. He organized one of the first shows to feature her quilts at the Richmond Art Center, and worked with BAMPFA in 1997 to organize her first solo exhibition.
Born Effie Mae Howard, the artist later adopted the pseudonym Rosie Lee Tompkins. She learned quilting traditions from her mother while growing up in rural Arkansas, but did not begin to practice the craft seriously until the 80’s, following a move to the Bay Area. Her works are radical pieces of storytelling, but not functional: none of her quilts have backs.
She used a wide range of materials in her quilts and assemblage sculptures, from carefully selected, purchased fabrics to scraps to glass bottles. Deeply religious, she often used Christian references, and likened her process to a kind of meditative prayer. She once told Leon, “if people like my work, that means the love of Jesus Christ is still shining through what I’m doing”.