New Quilt Exhibition at Upcountry History Museum Showcases Storytelling of Holiday Classic in Cloth
to
Upcountry History Museum 540 Buncombe Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601
UHM Illustration
While the colorful imagery and rhyming verses of this time-honored holiday classic are still treasured, this unique display of storytelling in cloth invites fans to experience it anew.
Quilts and holidays are a perfect blend, and the Upcountry History Museum’s newest exhibition, “Sue Reich’s The Quilter’s Night Before Christmas,” will take visitors on a familiar yet unique journey through the time-honored holiday classic, “The Night Before Christmas.”
Now open, this exhibition features 29 hand-crafted story quilts that create a three-dimensional visual of the traditional poem from its first stanza, “‘Twas the night before Christmas and all through the house” to its last, “But I heard him exclaim as he drove out of sight – ‘Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good night!’” and all the other memorable recollections in between.
Curated by award-winning quilter, author, historian and lecturer Sue Reich, this reimagined presentation of such an iconic holiday treasure gives new imagery to Clement C. Moore’s poem and his portrayal of St. Nicholas.
Created by quilters from across the United States, Reich was able to collect each quilter’s interpretation of a stanza of their choice as they stitched their vision of the holiday poem. Though retold in print, onstage, over the radio, or onscreen for more than 200 years, this extraordinary combination of colors, themes, stitches, and storytelling in cloth invites fans of the beloved holiday poem to experience it anew.
The colorful imagery and rhyming verses have stood the test of time and created a testament to the magic of this cherished poem’s lore. In “The Quilter’s Night Before Christmas,” visitors will not only be able to identify with those traditional aspects but also experience a more robust vision of how special this festive verse can be.
Making its first South Carolina appearance at UHM, this distinctively interpretive exhibition is on display through January 11, 2026.
The Museum is open Tuesday-Saturday, 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Sunday, 1:00-5:00 p.m.; closed Monday.
Google
Yahoo
Outlook
ical