Sewing the Seeds
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 29, 2009
Contact: Beth Manwaring â–ª 607.974.4254 â–ª manwaringb@rockwellmuseum.org
CORNING, NY - The Rockwell Museum of Western Art in Corning, NY will feature the special exhibition, Sewing the Seeds: 200 Years of Iroquois Glass Beadwork, beginning May 23 and will be on display through October 4. The summer glass exhibition will feature over 300 of the finest pieces of Iroquois beadwork ever created by Haudenosaunee bead workers.
The exhibition will exhibit imaginative images of flora and fauna on pieces of beadwork adorned with variety of a purses, moccasins, frames vast array of colors will feature beadwork in the shape of strawberries, beaded animals, as well as Indian-made dolls with beaded clothing. The flowers, plants, animals, and birds adorn pincushions, picture frames, and many other of the eighty types of Iroquois beadwork. A highlight of the exhibit will be a 21st century recreation of a traditional woman's outfit such as those worn by Haudenosaunee women in ceremonies, pow wows, and festivals for over three hundred years
The beadwork comes from the 2000-piece collection of Iroquois beadwork assembled by Dolores Elliott of Binghamton, NY. Elliott's collection is one of the largest collections in the world. She has authored several books concerning the history and identification of Iroquois beadwork including Flights of Fancy and Iroquois Beadwork Vol 1: A Short History. Her articles have appeared in BEADS: The Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers and in three journals of the Bead Society of Great Britain along with dozens of newspapers and historical society newsletters. She has presented dozens of presentations on Iroquois beadwork at colleges, museums, and meetings of social groups, historical societies, and archaeology clubs.
Pieces from the collection have been shown at the New York State Museum in Albany, the Mashantucket Pequot Museum in Connecticut, the United Nations Headquarters in New York City, the Bruce Museum in Connecticut, the Woolaroc Museum in Oklahoma, the Seneca Iroquois Museum in Salamanca, the Woodland Cultural Centre in Brantford, Ontario, and closer to home in Binghamton, Ithaca, Elmira, Vestal, Oneonta, and Syracuse.
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