A
filmmaker, Pat Ferrero, was intrigued by the quilts and probably
by their similarity to her own medium (film): repetitive,
pieced-together, slowly evolving patterns out of small details.
"Quilts
in Women's Lives" is a deceptively quiet half-hour leaving
you fascinated and uplifted -- just as you respond to a
magnificent quilt.
The
title tells it all: quilts enter lives, record them, parallel
them.
Of
the seven women seen during the course of the film, some
are indeed painters using scraps of material for their medium,
and they take traditional painterly attitudes toward their
work.
Lucy
Hilty, a Mennonite woman now living in Berkeley, talks about
her quilts requiring "big areas to express an idea" as she
shows a quilt whose subtle color patterns recall the atmospheric
abstract paintings of Rothko.
But
over and above painting, quiltmaking develops into a metaphor
of life itself. "Quilts in Women's Lives" is visual anthropology.
It examines by implication quiltmaking as a system of communication,
record-keeping and structuring principle.
The
film, like the quilts, embodies the reassuring care, the
forgiving attention to detail and the fascination of detail
and emerging pattern that animates the best of life itself."
-Charles
Shere
The Oakland Tribune