The fall season brings the third Connect program to South Fulton Arts with a special reading of “Gee’s Bend" by Elyzabeth Gregory Wilder, focusing on the quilting tradition of Gee's Bend. The evening, directed by Garry Yates, will showcase both historical and contemporary aspects of textile art and its cultural significance.
Gee's Bend is the story of the Pettway women, quilters from the isolated community of Gee's Bend, Alabama. Beginning in 1939, the play follows Alice, her daughters Sadie and Nella, and Sadie's husband, Macon, through segregation, family strife, and the Civil Rights movement. Throughout their lives, the women's extraordinary quilts provide a respite from the turmoil around them. In the last act of the play, it is the year 2000; the quilts have been discovered as folk art and have become very valuable. Sadie is pleased with the recognition, but despite the lure of the big city, she returns to Gee's Bend and continues to quilt. Wilder's play explores the resilience of the human spirit, especially as it is expressed in art.