
Rosie Lee Tompkins
Untitled, 2004
Polyester double knit, wool acrylic blend, cotton broadcloth (backing), wool yarn
24 x 34 inches
61 x 86.4 cm
SOLD
Rosie Lee Tompkins
Untitled, 2004
Polyester double knit, wool acrylic blend, cotton broadcloth (backing), wool yarn
24 x 34 inches
61 x 86.4 cm
SOLD
Rosie Lee Tompkins
Untitled, n.d.
Cotton sheeting, cotton polyester, acrylic yarn
74 1/8 x 42 inches
188.3 x 106.7 cm
SOLD
Rosie Lee Tompkins
Untitled, n.d.
Cotton undergarments with elastic, cotton yarn
22 1/4 x 32 inches
56.5 x 81.3 cm
SOLD
Rosie Lee Tompkins
Untitled, n.d.
Cotton khaki sateen (man's shirt), cotton knit, nylon flag, cotton thread. Backed with nylon flag (synthetic)
29 x 55 1/2 inches
73.7 x 141 cm
SOLD
Rosie Lee Tompkins
Untitled, ca. 1974
Polyester double knit, acrylic yarn, crepe print, synthetic sheer polyester tablecloth, muslin, shot cotton, nylon-spandex kit, acrylic sweater knit, poly-cotton linen blend, polyester crepe, polyester woven cotton Christmas print, cotton thread, backed with cotton advertising print
62 1/4 x 34 3/4 inches
158.1 x 88.3 cm
SOLD
Rosie Lee Tompkins
Untitled, n.d.
Wool challis, velvet, velveteen, panné velvet, cotton batik, woven blanket, cotton gingham heavy cotton knit, printed cotton (probably Indian bedspread), rip-stop nylon, plaid cotton flannel, cotton knit garment, gold on black metallic print (synthetic), gold on black metallic woven (synthetic), commercially embroidered cotton. Backed by wool challis with wool yarn and cotton thread.
33 1/4 x 29 3/4 inches
84.5 x 75.6 cm
SOLD
PRESS RELEASE
Rosie Lee Tompkins
15 January – 19 February 2021
On January 15th, Anthony Meier Fine Arts will present a solo exhibition of never-before-seen works by renowned American artist Rosie Lee Tompkins (1936–2006), considered one of the greatest quiltmakers of all times, and one of the century’s greatest artists.
The seven artworks included in the exhibition date from 1974 to 2006, the year of the artist’s death. This significant exhibition coincides with a major retrospective of her work at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, and includes a newly commissioned essay by Lawrence Rinder, the longtime champion of Tompkins and former Director of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive.
Rosie Lee Tompkins is the pseudonym of quilter Effie Mae Howard, who carefully guarded her privacy after her rise to national prominence in the late 1990s. Born on September 6, 1936 to a sharecropping family in southeastern Arkansas, she learned quilting from her mother as a child but did not begin to practice the craft seriously until the 1980s, when she was living in the Bay Area city of Richmond. Tompkins was a devout member of the Seventh Day Adventist Church, and credited God with her uncanny sense of color. Many of her quilts were made with family members or friends in mind, and can be seen as prayers on their behalf, including her sons.
Few of Tompkins’ quilts conform to the traditional scale of a bed covering, a byproduct of the conceptual logic inherent in each piece. Her quilts are characterized by the variation in scale of the triangles and squares used in her patterns, creating “asymmetrical forms that pull, crumble, and bend,” says Rinder. Tompkins “transformed everything she touched with her improvisatory piecing and unerring sense of color, composition and scale,” notes critic Roberta Smith. “In the still-unfolding field of African-American quilt-making, she has no equal.”
The exhibition is accompanied by Lawrence Rinder’s newly commissioned essay, ‘Rosie Lee Tompkins: Seven Quilts.’ An in-depth catalogue to the artist’s museum survey, ‘ROSIE LEE TOMPKINS: A RETROSPECTIVE’ by Elaine Y. Yau, Lawrence Rinder and Horace Ballard, was recently published by the University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive.