‘Building Bridges Through Storytelling': Original Quilts From the Southern CT Modern Quilt Guild

Wed, Dec 3, 2025
KT Kaminski
Green and Orange by the Southern Connecticut Modern Quilt Guild   

In the Sheffer Gallery

December 19, 2025, through March 17, 2026

Reception and Artist Talk: Thursday, January 15, 6-8 pm, in the Trefz Forum; click here for more information.
(Reception kicks off at 6 pm, followed by an artist talk at 7 pm with a panel of artists featured in the exhibit.)

About the Exhibit

This winter, The Westport Library will feature Building Bridges Through Storytelling, a multi-gallery quilting exhibition that will span the Sheffer, South, and Jesup Galleries from December 19, 2025, through March 17, 2026. Like a patchwork quilt itself, the show will weave together three distinct yet interconnected exhibits — each exploring how art and narrative bind communities across generations and geographies.

In the Sheffer Gallery, the Southern Connecticut Modern Quilt Guild (SCTMQG) will present original quilts inspired by the titular theme. These works reflect on shared experiences with a modern sensibility, from the pandemic to everyday acts of resilience.

About the Guild

Southern CT Modern Quilt Guild is a community of 42 artists focused on modern quilting for the last 11 years.  The Guild offers a space where people can meet, share, learn and create.  Interested in advancing modern quilting and supporting growth through art, education, and community. While they focus on modern quilting and are part of the National Modern Quilt Guild, SCTMQG welcomes all quilters and fiber artists. Like the national guild, they seek to foster an inclusive environment built on encouragement and mutual respect where all are welcome.

As a 5O1(c)(3) organization, SCTMQG provides quilts and pillowcases to local organizations in line with their mission and nonprofit status. They have provided quilts for Susie’s House and Homes with Hope in Westport, as well as California Fire Victims. They have partnered with Columbus House in New Haven, providing quilts and pillow cases for people experiencing homelessness. They have also supplied pillowcases to Connecticut Children’s Medical Center in Harford,and Elizabeth Seton Children’s Center in White Plains.

Learning is a large part of the guild. Members of the guild teach one another, and additionally have teachers come in and teach different quilting techniques, lessons on color, and expand on the history of quilting, fiber, and sewing machines. They host biannual retreats in the spring and fall and meet twice per month to commune, sew together, and work on charity quilts.

Community is very important to SCTMQG. Two years ago, the guild met Tangular Irby when she spoke with her Bridgeport Gees Bend family and friends. She came to a guild meeting and taught about her family in Gees Bend, Alabama, and their quilt making; and she shared her quilts with and spoke about how many from Gees Bend transitioned to Bridgeport, continuing their quilting. 

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For more about the Library art exhibits, visit the Art at the Library page.

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