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Excerpt:
...'She's alive?' a young girl asked me, eyes wide with
amazement, as I toured her class of second-graders through
Denise Allen's exhibit. 'Yes,' I replied. 'She's alive
and well, and living in Queens.' This young visitor's
response is one I heard from people of all ages who
came to see 'Family Ties: Needlework by Denise Allen,'
which was on exhibit at the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers,
New York, from January 15 to May 9 of last year. Allen's
work is so reminiscent of a rural, bygone era that many
people believe it was created more than a century ago
(and certainly not in a borough of Manhattan!). As a
contemporary folk artist, Allen fabricates dolls and
needlework tapestries that address her African-American
heritage. The history of slavery in the United States
is a frequent theme, as are folklore figures and popular-culture
icons. Even when treating more recent autobiographical
themes, Allen casts her figures in an antiquated light.
They wear nineteenth-century dresses, cook on wood-burning
stoves, do their washing by hand, and participate in
quilting bees. It is women -- strong, brave, nurturing
women, the backbone of the American family -- who are
the common thread in Allen's work.
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Her multifaceted works
capture a real sense of home -- interiors cluttered
with people, pets, furniture, food, family photographs,
books, and religious objects. She combines various needlework
techniques, such as applique, piecing, and quilting,
with actual wicker baskets and kitchen utensils sewn
directly on to her tapestries. Her materials include
scraps of old clothing, curtains, and blankets, as well
as objects she purchases at flea markets. She uses tea
to stain fabrics so that they look old and worn. Indeed,
she loves anything old-fashioned. Using an antique sewing
machine, she makes her own clothing, which she patterns
after late nineteenth-century country attire. She dreams
of one day moving from her small apartment in Queens
to a farmhouse in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where
she can ride a horse and buggy rather than the subway.
Her rich combinations of colors, textures and patterns
-- and the contrast between the painted two-dimensional
and the sewn three-dimensional elements -- create a
visual patchwork in which viewers can discover multiple
stories.
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