Today only: Your gift TRIPLE matched

Donate by midnight for 3X the impact. Can women artists count on you?    

Urgent Museum Notice

National Museum of Women in the Arts

Routed West: Twentieth-Century African American Quilts in California

A vibrant, hand-quilted cotton textile features a combination of blue, orange, yellow, and red patchwork.
Sep 18, 2026, to Jan 17, 2027

Routed West traces the flow and flourishing of quilts in the context of the Second Great Migration, a mass movement of approximately five million African Americans from the rural South to cities in the North and West between 1940 and 1970 in search of a more equitable life. Many of the hundreds of thousands of migrants who arrived in California carried quilts for warmth and protection, as containers for ancestral memory, and as emblems of cultural survival.

Organized across several themes through more than 80 artworks with kaleidoscopic patterns, colors, and forms, Routed West offers a history of art through quilts’ joyful power in Black life.

The quilts in the exhibition highlight artistic approaches such as repurposing work clothes, improvisational piecing, pattern-based quilting, and tying, practiced by those who would carry these works out of the South. Quilts by migrants from Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, and Texas, regions heavily represented in the westward movement of African Americans, reflect the ways in which these works become cherished heirlooms.

As teachers, nurses, seamstresses, truck drivers, grocery store managers, shipyard workers, and other members of a laboring class, a number of artists used quilt-making to reclaim time for themselves, pursuing creative labor that could be meditative, centering, and liberating. Many of the quilts showcase the work of multiple generations of quiltmakers within families, while works by contemporary artists illustrate the ways they keep traditions of African American quilting alive today.

A central embroidered and collaged fabric portrait shows a gray-complexioned woman in a brown-and-white polka dot dress and black hat. The portrait is surrounded by various traditional quilt blocks on a beige surface.

Alice Neal, Mary Bright Commemorative Quilt (with Dresden Plate, Monkey Wrench, Wild Goose Chase, Fan, Basket of Flowers, Star of Lemoyne, Nine Patch blocks), 1956; Cotton, buttons, woven hat, appliqué, hand-pieced and quilted, 78 1⁄2 x 62 3⁄4 in.; Bequest of the Eli Leon Living Trust, BAMPFA; Photo by Kevin Candland

Exhibition Sponsors

Routed West: Twentieth-Century African American Quilts in California is organized by the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. The exhibition is curated by Elaine Y. Yau, Associate Curator and Academic Liaison, with Matthew Villar Miranda, Former Curatorial Associate.

Funding for the conservation of the quilt collection was generously provided by Angela and David Filo; a grant from the Bank of America Art Conservation Project, the Save America’s Treasures program of the Institute of Museum and Library Services, and the Office of the Chancellor at the University of California, Berkeley.

Support provided by Art Bridges.