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Quilting Freedom “My Way” in Honor of Martin Luther King Jr.

By Matthew Monk, Linda Eaton Associate Curator of Textiles

Each January, Martin Luther King Jr. Day invites us to pause and reflect on the unfinished civil rights work in the United States. At Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library, that reflection is often shaped by objects that people made to care for one another, to create feelings of home, and to claim dignity in the face of hardship. Three objects recently added to Winterthur’s collection—a contemporary quilt and two potholders made in Gee’s Bend, Alabama—embody that legacy of resilience, creativity, continuity, and community.

Sharon Pettway Williams and Jamica Williams, quilt, Alabama, U.S., 2023. Museum purchase with funds from the bequest of Barbara P. Katz 2023.0026. Photo by Azuree Holloway.

Sharon Williams and her granddaughter Jamica made these quilted objects in 2023, but these objects and their makers belong to a living tradition that stretches back generations in Gee’s Bend, a small, predominantly Black community on a bend of the Alabama River. Williams describes her design style as “My Way,” marked by free-pieced quilting that relies on intuition, bold geometry, and the creative reuse of available materials. Williams learned this tradition from her mother and grandmother and passes it down to her descendants today. Her quilt at Winterthur is composed of cotton fabrics, vintage and contemporary prints pieced together into a dynamic kaleidoscope of patchwork. The quilt is machine pieced and hand quilted. The quilt is also a living lesson between grandmother and granddaughter. It is at once deeply personal and unmistakably part of a collective Gee’s Bend aesthetic.

Gee’s Bend quilts are widely celebrated today, but they were born from necessity. For much of the 20th century, families in Gee’s Bend lived in relative isolation, many as descendants of people once enslaved on nearby cotton plantations. Women used worn clothing, flour sacks, and other textiles at hand to create quilts that provided warmth and protection in drafty homes. In doing so, they developed a distinctive visual language, one that later came to be recognized as one of the most important artistic traditions in American quilting.

Gail Bush, Winterthur textile conservation volunteer, and Matthew Monk, Linda Eaton Associate Curator of Textiles, examine the Gees Bend quilt. Photo by Azuree Holloway.

The two potholders Winterthur acquired alongside the quilt may be small, but they carry the same powerful story. Also made by Sharon and Jamica Williams in 2023, they use the same free-pieced “My Way” approach, translated into everyday kitchen textiles. Their bold blocks of color and asymmetrical patterns echo the quilt’s design, reminding us that art and daily life are not separate in Gee’s Bend; they are stitched together.

Pot holder, 2023. Gift of Sharon Pettway Williams 2025.0021.001
Pot holder, 2023. Gift of Sharon Pettway Williams 2025.0021.002

Honoring these objects on Martin Luther King Jr. Day is especially meaningful. Dr. King fought for civil rights, not only in speeches and marches, but in the affirmation of Black dignity, creativity, and self-determination. Gee’s Bend quilts are part of that same story. They are material expressions of endurance in the face of segregation, poverty, and exclusion. They are also material reminders of the power of community to sustain itself through making.

At Winterthur, these works also expand the museum’s narrative of American design, linking the contemporary and modern to the historical. For the first time, our collection includes a contemporary Gee’s Bend quilt and potholders by a named maker, recognizing Sharon Williams not only as part of a tradition, but as an artist in her own right. Her work connects the past to the present, showing that the history of Gee’s Bend, while rooted in a difficult past, is not frozen in time and continues to grow, adapt, and inspire.

As we commemorate Dr. King’s legacy, these three textiles invite us to consider how everyday acts of making can be acts of freedom and expressions of choice. They remind us that the struggle for justice is woven not only through laws and movements, but through the hands of people who, against all odds, kept creating beauty for themselves and their communities in their own ways.

Preventive Conservation and Community

By William Donnelly, associate preventive conservator and WUDPAC affiliated assistant professor

As Winterthur’s preventive conservator, I safeguard the health of the collection, its environment, and its long-term care. Preventive conservation functions as an umbrella discipline, encompassing and coordinating many aspects of museum stewardship. At its core, it’s a community-centered approach to cultural heritage preservation—whether practiced in an institution, in private collections, or by volunteers supporting local churches, veterans’ organizations, and community groups.

One of the areas I oversee at Winterthur is integrated pest management. A dedicated team of preventive technicians maintains a network of monitoring traps that alert us to potential issues with the building envelope (which separates the interior of a building from the exterior, and includes the roof, walls, floors, windows, and doors) and possible infestations affecting collection areas. When pests are detected, we apply targeted eradication methods, including low-temperature and carbon dioxide treatments.

Graduate students in the Winterthur / University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation (WUDPAC) working on stabilizing and conserving objects in the conservation labs of Winterthur Museum and Gardens.

I also work as a professor in the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation and I advise students on object treatment and preventive strategies, which occasionally involve pest mitigation. Many students are interested in working with ethnographic and indigenous materials, which require cultural sensitivity and specialized handling. With that in mind, I decided to pursue a museum studies certificate through the Institute of American Indian Arts.

The program consists of ten courses, and I am currently completing the ninth, which focuses on Indigenous Intellectual Property (Indigenous IP). The course explores how legal frameworks intersect with cultural values. United States intellectual property law mainly protects individual rights, while Indigenous IP is rooted in collective ownership and designed to endure indefinitely. This contrast reveals how conventional legal systems often fail to encompass the cultural realities of Indigenous communities.

When I began the certificate program, I expected to learn primarily about the care and handling of materials. While I have gained those practical skills, the deeper lessons have been far more transformative. I now understand that community-centered work requires entering a project without an agenda. Most importantly, I’ve learned more of what it means to preserve cultural heritage. When communities define their own goals and have a true stake in the outcome, the results are more authentic and lasting. Many Indigenous traditions rely on oral histories to carry forward identity and knowledge. Sacred or ceremonial objects, when needed for rituals, are passed down with the understanding of their care and, when necessary, the ability to reproduce them for future generations.

At Winterthur I often encounter family archives that serve a similar purpose—preserving stories and memories through meaningful objects. Whether in a museum or family home, these collections link people to their pasts and ensure their stories live on. In a world that can feel fractured, it’s grounding to remember that preservation connects us through shared human desires: to be remembered, to honor our histories, and to safeguard the legacies entrusted to our care.

Architecture of Independence

Explore the founding of our nation through the complex stories preserved within the architecture of the original thirteen colonies. Discover the history of the Charleston Dining Room, from its origins as the William Burrows House to its transformation under free Black entrepreneur Jehu Jones in the early 1800s, and its later years as a boarding house. Reservations required. For ages 8 and up. $15 with admission; $5 for Members.

Tuesday-Sunday, through May 31 | 2:30–3:45 pm

Tuesday-Sunday, June 1–November 20 | 2:00–3:15 pm

Purchase tickets.

More to Explore

See the house presented as a home, entertaining space, and historic collection. This tour visits multiple rooms and floors of the house exploring beyond what is included in the general admission tour. Reservations required; capacity limited. For ages 8 and up. $15 with admission; $5 for Members.

Tuesday–Sunday, through May 31 | 11:00 am–12:15 pm, 1:00–2:15 pm, 1:30–2:45 pm

Tuesday–Sunday, June 1–November 20 | 11:00 am–12:15 pm and 3:00-4:15 pm

Purchase tickets.

A Yuletide Tour Seek and Find

Photo by Holden Barnes.

We hope you enjoy all the special touches in this year’s Yuletide Tour. In addition to all the stunning trees and beautifully decorated rooms, numerous delightful or unexpected details are artfully tucked into our literature-themed displays. See how many you find!

1. “Tri-Sarah-Tops” dinosaur figurine named by one of our staff members. Yes, she’s hard to spot!

2. A tiny yeti  (Hint: it’s hidden inside a wooden log)

3. Two vases with illustrations from the book Les Fleurs Animées, on loan from a private collector

4. A Cheshire Cat tree inspired by the mysterious grinning feline in Alice in Wonderland

5. A baby doll in a handbag representing Jack, a major character from Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest, A Trivial Comedy for Serious People. Jack was found in a handbag at a train station, an incident that may affect his marital prospects. 

Photo by Holden Barnes.

6. A sailboat on a tree, inspired by the ships in Herman Melville’s novel Moby Dick

7. The 11th edition of A Christmas Carol. Released in 1843, Dickens’s classic tale was such a bestseller that by 1846 publishers had to release an 11th edition.

8. The Tardis from the popular television series Doctor Who. Hint: it’s on a tree

9. The Grinch from How the Grinch Stole Christmas by Dr. Seuss

10. Winterthur Farms milk bottles and a canister, a tribute to our historic dairy farm

11. The Winterthur guest book signed by H. F. du Pont’s guests, highlighting the social life at Winterthur

Photo by Holden Barnes.

Answers

By room name and theme.

1. Montmorenci Stair Hall — The one with the grand staircase where you start your tour

2. Marlboro Room — The one about MacBeth

3. Empire Parlor — The one with Flowery mannequin

4. The fifth floor to sixth floor staircase — The one about Alice in Wonderland 

5. Baltimore Drawing Room — The one . . . with the babydoll in a handbag!

6. Chestertown Room — The one about Moby Dick

7. Du Pont Dining Room — The one about Fezziwig’s Christmas party in A Christmas Carol

8. Georgia Dining Room — The one about “A Visit from St. Nicholas”

9. Latimeria Room — The one about Humpty Dumpty and Through the Looking Glass

10. Port Royal Entrance — The one with the purple cow

11. Port Royal Parlor — The one about The Great Gatsby

Photo by Holden Barnes.

Experience the Yuletide Tour

Our self-paced Yuletide house tour is offered Tuesdays–Sundays, 10:00 am–5:00 pm (last tour at 4:15 pm). Plus, on select Friday and Saturday nights we’re open until 8:00 pm (last tour at 7:15 pm) through January 4. 

John Lewis Krimmel’s Christmas Sketches

By Tyler Johnson, tour program assistant

The Winterthur Library is home to more than a million objects, books, and ephemera. Contained within this vast treasure trove are seven sketchbooks in watercolor, pencil, and pen and ink kept by German-born genre artist John Lewis Krimmel (1786–1821). The son of a confectioner in Württemberg, Krimmel emigrated to the United States in 1809 and began painting portraits, street scenes, and miniatures.

Krimmel’s paintings and sketchbooks are filled with his observations of daily American life and have been used in many interpretations across the museum’s history. Winterthur owns three of his paintings, The Quilting Frolic, Self-Portrait of John Lewis Krimmel with Susannah Krimmel and Her Children, and Election Day in Philadelphia. These works could each have their own blog post as they inspire many conversation points and discussion topics.

Special to the Yuletide season, one of Krimmel’s sketchbooks contains some of the earliest known depictions of Christmas trees in American art. His two Christmas Eve watercolor sketches show a multi-generational family gathered around tabletop trees (two trees in the first sketch, one in the second). Drawn between 1812 and 1820, they feature broadleaf evergreens, perhaps holly bushes, decorated with springerle cookies. The table holds plates filled with cookies and paper cornucopias stuffed with tiny treats which were left for the children by the Belsnickel, a Germanic gift giver, as their Christmas gifts.

John Lewis Krimmel, Sketchbook 2, 1812–13. Watercolor, pencil, and pen-and-ink drawings. Winterthur Library 308 59×5.7, ll. 7, 8
Krimmel’s first of two sketches, more symmetrical in nature.

Until the mid-1800s, Christmas trees in America were usually placed on tabletops. As in Krimmel’s sketches, the edible ornaments doubled as gifts, making the tree a one-day wonder. The trees were decorated in secret to surprise the children, who immediately devoured the goodies when they spotted them on Christmas Eve. Around the time of the American Civil War, people started combining gifts on the Christmas tree with purely decorative ornaments, heralding its transformation into an icon of the season.

Krimmel’s two Christmas Eve sketches are similar in scope but have some variations, especially with the young child and dog interactions. The first sketch features two small Christmas trees flanking a tiny house, while the second features one larger, taller tree, with many of the family members positioned differently. Each shows Krimmel’s penchant for capturing a special moment in time.

There are many early holiday traditions, and for people of Pennsylvania German descent, John Lewis Krimmel’s sketches display a staple of their holiday practices—a tabletop tree decorated with ornaments made of traditional sweets for an edible extravaganza. And family members of all ages enjoying the season and each other’s company in a delightfully festive setting.

John Lewis Krimmel, Sketchbook 2, 1812–13. Watercolor, pencil, and pen-and-ink drawings. Winterthur Library 308 59×5.7, ll. 7, 8
More complete than the previous sketch, with some characters repositioned. The dog claiming a treat from the child is a top-notch detail; my dog is jealous when I eat cookies too.

For more information about John Lewis Krimmel, look for the book John Lewis Krimmel: Genre Artist of the Early Republic by Dr. Annelise Harding.

At Home At Winterthur

Discover the many lives of Winterthur and explore the estate as a place of home, community, and inspiration. From a country landscape that supported hunting, gathering, and farming to its evolution into a renowned museum, garden, library, and center for conservation and academic study, Winterthur has been shaped by the people who called it home and work and by the community of visitors and friends who have come to experience its beauty. Through personal stories, rarely seen objects, and rich historical context, At Home at Winterthur invites you to reflect on what it means to create a place, to belong to a place, and to share in its legacy. Get additional insights on a guided gallery walk, available Tuesday–Sunday, 1:15–1:45 pm.

Becoming Peale

September 18, 2027–January 9, 2028

Meet the first family of American artists who depicted the dawn of the nation and forged a lasting cultural legacy.

The enduring influence of the Peale family of artists on the nation’s art, innovation, and cultural identity is revealed in this groundbreaking exhibition bringing together the museum’s collection of Peale art and archival treasures for the first time.

The Edward Lloyd Family, 1771. Charles Willson Peale (1741–1827), Talbot, Maryland oil on canvas. Museum purchase 1964.0124

A Wonderful, Whimsical Gingerbread Train Station

By Evelyn Mason

Photo by Holden Barnes

The scent catches you first. It’s rich and velvety, full of ginger, cinnamon, and molasses. Then, as you walk from the Galleries Reception Area into the Montgomery Room, you catch sight of it—a panorama of gingerbread trees, a train station, a train, and more, all in brown and white and vibrant red and green. This year’s gingerbread “house” is the historic train station at Winterthur.*

Photo by Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library

“Winterthur is full of stories—and each year I get to create a new one,” said Diana Anello, who made the gingerbread display for Yuletide.  She headed up a team of six from Bredenbeck’s Bakery & Ice Cream Parlor, who spent more than 100 hours mixing, baking, and decorating the massive gingerbread creation. Made with 18 pounds of butter and 62 pounds of sugar, the finished creation, including a special support board, weighs almost 200 pounds. For the fourth year in a row, the bakery has collaborated with Winterthur to create a custom creation inspired by the estate.

Photo by Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library

Anello loves the fun as well as the challenge and frustration of trying to outdo herself each year. She started in early July, planning the design and figuring out the logistics. The display includes overpasses, plus extra lights powered by battery packs, hidden under the coal in a train and under a rock candy “puddle.” Some of the trees were made using snowflake cookie cutters and tilted on their sides, and others, across the display, are frosted in deep or bright green, flecked with white sprinkles. Snowflakes are scattered throughout.

Photo by Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library

Making a train from gingerbread was a first for Anello.  She incorporated the Polar Express and added the W from the Winterthur logo to a train car, filling it with confectionery milk bottles and crates as a link back to Winterthur’s history as an award-winning dairy farm.

In one corner of the display, she crafted an illusion of an open book cover. Peering through, you can view the scene in a glance, like “a book that was opening up with the story coming out of it,” said Anello. “You’ll get my first impression of when we came to look at the railroad station.”

Photo by Holden Barnes

She wanted to create little moments and pay homage to the gingerbread houses of previous years, so there are elements from each. When you come to see it, look for seven hidden fairies with golden wings (Enchanted Woods), a vintage car (the mansion), and milk containers (dairy barn complex). 

“I want to inspire other people to create gingerbread houses,” said Diana Anello. Come during Yuletide and see her wonderful, whimsical creation. You just might be inspired to craft a gingerbread display of your own. 

Photo by Holden Barnes

*The Winterthur train station, situated at the back of the property near Route 100, served as a stop on the Wilmington and Northern Railroad and as Winterthur’s post office from 1900 to 1967. While freight trains still traverse Winterthur’s rails, they no longer stop at the station, which is now a private home for a Winterthur employee.