A woman explains an artwork depicting a historical figure surrounded by endangered birds and newspaper headlines to a group of people at an art exhibit.
Past Exhibition

Black Pioneers: Legacy in the American West

September 3, 2022 through January 8, 2023

This exhibition, the first of its kind, explores the path of Black history in the West with a timeline of original pictorial quilts. The timeline begins in 1528, with Esteban’s dramatic story, which marks the arrival of Africans in the American West and continues through the Civil Rights Movement. 

Highlights From the Exhibition

Sandra Noble, Annie Box Neal, 2021, ©Sandra E. Noble

Tierney Davis Hogan, Langston Hughes, Pioneer Poet, 2021, ©Tierney Davis Hogan

Connie Horne, Black Miners, 2021, ©Connie Horne

Dispelling the myth that Black people in the old West were mostly cowboys, Black Pioneers: Legacy in the American West, shows rich diversity in their occupations and achievements in society, religion, education, and the arts. Quilts were chosen as the visual medium for this exhibition because they function to highlight the intersections of African Americans in the Western Frontier while informing others about the art form and its important role in African American history.

“Quilts and quilt making are important to America and Black culture in particular, because the art form was historically one of the few mediums accessible to marginalized groups to tell their own story, to provide warmth for their families, and to empower them with a voice through cloth.” 

Dr. Carolyn Mazloomi, Exhibition Curator

Limited Time

TRAVELING EXHIBITION

The James Museum was proud to offer Black Pioneers: Legacy in the American West as a traveling exhibition. For inquires, please contact Associate Curator Caitlin Pendola at [email protected].

The Booth Western Art Museum: January 28 – May 21, 2023
California Museum: June 10 – October 1, 2023
The Stark Museum: March 2 – August 3, 2024
The Upcountry Museum: October 26, 2024 – February 16, 202

This exhibition is organized by The James Museum of Western & Wildlife Art and Dr. Carolyn Mazloomi, curator, historian and artist.

The 50 quilts were created by the Women of Color Quilters Network especially for this exhibition. Founded by Dr. Carolyn Mazloomi in 1985, Women of Color Quilters Network (WCQN) is a non-profit national organization whose mission is to educate, preserve, exhibit, promote and document quilts made by African Americans.