SAVANNAH, GA – June 03, 2026 – On its surface, the announcement of an art exhibition is a familiar piece of cultural programming. Telfair Museums, the oldest public art museum in the South, will soon open “Roots in the Rushes: African American Basketry of the Lowcountry.” The exhibition, running for nearly a year starting in April 2026, promises a compelling look at the coiled basketry of the Gullah Geechee people. But to view this event as merely an artistic showcase is to miss the far more significant story of economic resilience, technological transfer, and the calculated modern business of cultural heritage.
- Coiled baskets were a technology of survival: Gullah Geechee expertise in bulrush weaving enabled the Lowcountry rice economy.
- Post-emancipation weavers launched roadside stand enterprises, reclaiming pricing power and turning functional baskets into prized artworks like those by Mary Jackson.
- Coastal development endangers sweetgrass supply while inexpensive imports provoke cultural appropriation, threatening artisan livelihoods.
- Telfair Museums and grants validate Gullah craft, monetizing heritage via Roots in the Rushes and community programs led by Queen Quet.
This is not simply a collection of beautiful objects. It is a chronicle of an economic system forged in the crucible of slavery, adapted through generations of market-making, and now being validated by institutional capital and the global tourism industry. The intricate coils of bulrush and sweetgrass on display at the Telfair Academy represent a direct, unbroken thread from a brutal agricultural past to a complex commercial present. They are artifacts of a unique American economy, one that has operated for centuries just off the main roads of conventional commerce.
A Technology of Survival in the Rice Kingdom
The story of these baskets begins not as art, but as essential technology. The Gullah Geechee people, descendants of West and Central Africans enslaved on the isolated coastal plantations of the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida, brought with them an invaluable asset: specialized knowledge. Many hailed from the rice-growing regions of West Africa, and their expertise was brutally exploited to build the Lowcountry’s immensely profitable rice empire. Central to this enterprise was the coiled basket.
Long before they were decorative items, these vessels were sophisticated agricultural tools. The large, flat “fanner” baskets were used for winnowing—the critical process of tossing threshed rice into the air to separate the heavy grain from the lighter chaff. Their construction, from tough, locally sourced bulrush sewn with strips of oak or palmetto, had to be precise, durable, and functional. In an era before industrial machinery, these hand-woven tools were the machinery of the rice economy. The knowledge to create them was a form of intellectual property, passed down through generations not in classrooms but in slave quarters, a technology of survival that was as vital as the crop itself.
The exhibition’s focus on this history elevates the artisans from mere laborers to technologists and engineers whose ingenuity was foundational to regional wealth. It reframes the narrative, forcing a recognition that the economic engine of the 18th and 19th-century South was powered not just by forced labor, but by the forced application of African intellect and skill.
The Roadside Stand as a Business Model
With emancipation, the economic function of the Gullah Geechee basket weavers underwent a radical transformation. The skills that were once essential to plantation production became a currency for economic independence. The evolution from agricultural tool to market good marks a pivotal moment in this story, culminating in a uniquely resilient business model: the roadside stand.
In the 1930s, as automobile tourism began to trace paths through the Lowcountry, weavers like Ida Jefferson Wilson pioneered a direct-to-consumer enterprise along Highway 17. By setting up stands, artisans bypassed intermediaries and sold their increasingly decorative sweetgrass baskets directly to travelers. This was not a quaint folk tradition; it was a strategic economic pivot. It allowed weavers to control their pricing, tell their own stories, and establish a market based on authenticity and personal connection—a model that thrives to this day.
The baskets themselves evolved. While retaining the ancient coiling technique, artisans incorporated new materials like sweetgrass and longleaf pine needles, creating more delicate and aesthetically complex forms. This shift from pure utility to art object opened a new, more lucrative market. Today, the work of a master weaver like Mary Jackson—a recipient of a MacArthur Foundation “genius grant”—can be found in the Smithsonian and the White House, commanding prices that place this craft firmly in the category of fine art. Yet, the economic engine for most remains the cash-and-carry economy of the roadside stand, a powerful symbol of self-determination.
This economic ecosystem, however, is not without modern pressures. Weavers face challenges in sourcing their primary material, sweetgrass, as coastal development encroaches on the wild marshes where it grows. This supply chain vulnerability is a direct threat to the craft’s future. Furthermore, the market is rife with inexpensive, imported knock-offs that threaten the economic livelihood of authentic Gullah Geechee artisans, raising complex questions of cultural appropriation and intellectual property protection for a tradition that predates copyright law.
The Institutional Ledger: Investing in Cultural Capital
The decision by Telfair Museums to mount this year-long exhibition is a significant act of institutional validation. Backed by a $15,000 grant from the Americana Foundation and further investment by the City of Savannah, “Roots in the Rushes” is more than an acknowledgment of cultural history; it is an investment in the region’s burgeoning heritage economy.
For an institution founded in 1886, this exhibition aligns with a broader, necessary trend in the museum world: a critical re-examination of historical narratives to include the contributions of marginalized communities. As Ahmauri Williams-Alford, the museum’s Assistant Curator of Historical Interpretation, states, “These baskets are more than just vessels; they are a testament to the ingenuity and survival of a people.” This sentiment reflects a curatorial vision that sees the objects not as static artifacts, but as evidence of a dynamic economic and cultural history.
By lending its prestige and resources, the museum is effectively underwriting the value of Gullah Geechee basketry as a cornerstone of Savannah’s cultural identity and tourism appeal. The planned community engagement programs, including a Juneteenth Free Family Day featuring storytelling by Queen Quet, Chieftess of the Gullah Geechee Nation, are strategic initiatives designed to embed the exhibition within the community it represents and attract a diverse audience. This is how cultural capital is built and monetized in the 21st century. The exhibition serves as a powerful marketing tool for the region, signaling to the world that Savannah’s identity is deeply and authentically intertwined with the Gullah Geechee legacy, making it a more compelling destination for the discerning cultural tourist. The investment from the city and private foundations is a clear indicator that they understand this dynamic, recognizing that preserving and promoting this heritage is essential for future economic growth.


