Joanna Semel Rose (1930-2021)
New York lost a remarkable woman last month with the passing of Joanna Semel Rose.
Quilt fans are familiar with her name because her husband threw
her a spectacular 80th birthday party in 2011.
With the help of the American Folk Art Museum the Roses filled a huge space in the Park Avenue Armory with 651 red and white quilts for five days. Infinite Variety: Three Centuries of Red and White Quilts, was a gift for Joanna and everyone else. Admission was free.
The 55,000-square-foot Armory empty
She herself was a brilliant student, graduating from Bryn Mawr summa cum laude as valedictorian.
She was Chair of the Board of The Partisan Review literary magazine and elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
You will see her name and her husband's in spaces around New York, such as the Rose Reading Room at the New York Public Library.
And in spaces outside of Manhattan; an asteroid belt is named DanielJoanna after the Roses.
For fun she collected quilts (She said: Accumulated quilts---she didn't collect them.)
An enthusiastic accumulator, she also bought cookbooks, Pre-Columbian
art, oriental rugs and fashion from Christian Lacroix.
Morgan Library
Illustration of Psalm 104 by Barbara Wolff
Red and white quilts were not her only quilt collection. A few years ago the International Quilt Museum hung a show of her quilts featuring chrome orange and yellow fabrics.
Recently she donated her quilts to the International Quilt Museum, which plans an exhibit (A selection of the quilts. They are not renting an armory) from April 1, 2022 to September 10, 2022.
Catalog of the exhibit
Age cannot wither her, nor custom staleWhich described her perfectly.
Her infinite variety …
I went to that show - it was spectacular! Took 100s of photos!
ReplyDeleteBest Quilt Display that ever was or will be. Thanks for sharing more about Rose's life.
ReplyDeleteMy niece saw the R&W quilts show in NY--I asked her to see it with my eyes--she said it was astonishng.
ReplyDeleteI bought the R&W quilts books:oh my goodness.
This show was life changing for me, and I'll forever be grateful for Joanna Rose and her family for putting that show together. Hopefully I will get to see this next exhibit of her pieces in 2022.
ReplyDelete