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Arts and Crafts movement

The Arts and Crafts movement was an international trend in the decorative and fine arts that developed earliest and most fully in the British Isles[1] and subsequently spread across the British Empire and to the rest of Europe and America.[2]

William Morris' design for Trellis wallpaper, 1862

Initiated in reaction against the perceived impoverishment of the decorative arts and the conditions in which they were produced,[3] the movement flourished in Europe and North America between about 1880 and 1920. It is the root of the Modern Style, the British expression of what later came to be called the Art Nouveau movement, which it strongly influenced. [4] In Japan, it emerged in the 1920s as the Mingei movement. It stood for traditional craftsmanship, and often used medieval, romantic, or folk styles of decoration. It advocated economic and social reform and was anti-industrial in its orientation.[3][5] It had a strong influence on the arts in Europe until it was displaced by Modernism in the 1930s,[1] and its influence continued among craft makers, designers, and town planners long afterwards.[6]

The term was first used by T. J. Cobden-Sanderson at a meeting of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society in 1887,[7] although the principles and style on which it was based had been developing in England for at least 20 years. It was inspired by the ideas of historian Thomas Carlyle, art critic John Ruskin, and designer William Morris.[8] In Scotland, it is associated with key figures such as Charles Rennie Mackintosh.[9]

Origins and influences

Design reform

The Arts and Crafts movement emerged from the attempt to reform design and decoration in mid-19th century Britain. It was a reaction against a perceived decline in standards that the reformers associated with machinery and factory production. Their critique was sharpened by the items that they saw in the Great Exhibition of 1851, which they considered to be excessively ornate, artificial, and ignorant of the qualities of the materials used. Art historian Nikolaus Pevsner writes that the exhibits showed "ignorance of that basic need in creating patterns, the integrity of the surface", as well as displaying "vulgarity in detail".[10]

Design reform began with Exhibition organizers Henry Cole (1808–1882), Owen Jones (1809–1874), Matthew Digby Wyatt (1820–1877), and Richard Redgrave (1804–1888),[11] all of whom deprecated excessive ornament and impractical or badly made things.[12] The organizers were "unanimous in their condemnation of the exhibits."[13] Owen Jones, for example, complained that "the architect, the upholsterer, the paper-stainer, the weaver, the calico-printer, and the potter" produced "novelty without beauty, or beauty without intelligence."[13] From these criticisms of manufactured goods emerged several publications that set out what the writers considered to be the correct principles of design. Richard Redgrave's Supplementary Report on Design (1852) analysed the principles of design and ornament and pleaded for "more logic in the application of decoration."[12]

Other works followed in a similar vein, such as Wyatt's Industrial Arts of the Nineteenth Century (1853), Gottfried Semper's Wissenschaft, Industrie und Kunst ("Science, Industry and Art") (1852), Ralph Wornum's Analysis of Ornament (1856), Redgrave's Manual of Design (1876), and Jones's Grammar of Ornament (1856).[12] The Grammar of Ornament was particularly influential, liberally distributed as a student prize and running into nine reprints by 1910.[12]

Jones declared that ornament "must be secondary to the thing decorated", that there must be "fitness in the ornament to the thing ornamented", and that wallpapers and carpets must not have any patterns "suggestive of anything but a level or plain".[14] A fabric or wallpaper in the Great Exhibition might be decorated with a natural motif made to look as real as possible, whereas these writers advocated flat and simplified natural motifs. Redgrave insisted that "style" demanded sound construction before ornamentation, and a proper awareness of the quality of materials used. "Utility must have precedence over ornamentation."[15]

 
The Nature of Gothic by John Ruskin, printed by William Morris at the Kelmscott Press in 1892 in his Golden Type inspired by the 15th-century printer Nicolas Jenson. This chapter from The Stones of Venice was a sort of manifesto for the Arts and Crafts movement.

However, the design reformers of the mid-19th century did not go as far as the designers of the Arts and Crafts movement. They were more concerned with ornamentation than construction, they had an incomplete understanding of methods of manufacture,[15] and they did not criticise industrial methods as such. By contrast, the Arts and Crafts movement was as much a movement of social reform as design reform, and its leading practitioners did not separate the two.

A. W. N. Pugin

 
Pugin's house "The Grange" in Ramsgate, from 1843. Its simplified Gothic style, adapted to domestic building, helped shape the architecture of the Arts and Crafts movement.

Some of the ideas of the movement were anticipated by Augustus Pugin (1812–1852), a leader in the Gothic revival in architecture. For example, he advocated truth to material, structure, and function, as did the Arts and Crafts artists.[16] Pugin articulated the tendency of social critics to compare the faults of modern society with the Middle Ages,[17] such as the sprawling growth of cities and the treatment of the poor – a tendency that became routine with Ruskin, Morris, and the Arts and Crafts movement. His book Contrasts (1836) drew examples of bad modern buildings and town planning in contrast with good medieval examples, and his biographer Rosemary Hill notes that he "reached conclusions, almost in passing, about the importance of craftsmanship and tradition in architecture that it would take the rest of the century and the combined efforts of Ruskin and Morris to work out in detail." She describes the spare furnishings which he specified for a building in 1841, "rush chairs, oak tables", as "the Arts and Crafts interior in embryo."[17]

John Ruskin

The Arts and Crafts philosophy was derived in large measure from John Ruskin's social criticism, deeply influenced by the work of Thomas Carlyle.[18] Ruskin related the moral and social health of a nation to the qualities of its architecture and to the nature of its work. Ruskin considered the sort of mechanized production and division of labour that had been created in the industrial revolution to be "servile labour", and he thought that a healthy and moral society required independent workers who designed the things that they made. He believed factory-made works to be "dishonest," and that handwork and craftsmanship merged dignity with labour.[19] Ruskin was also heavily influenced by his contempory Viollet le Duc - "there is only one book of any value and that is the Dictionnaire of Viollet le Duc".

His followers favoured craft production over industrial manufacture and were concerned about the loss of traditional skills, but they were more troubled by the effects of the factory system than by machinery itself.[20] William Morris's idea of "handicraft" was essentially work without any division of labour rather than work without any sort of machinery.[21]

William Morris

 
William Morris, a textile designer who was a key influence on the Arts and Crafts movement

William Morris (1834–1896) was the towering figure in late 19th-century design and the main influence on the Arts and Crafts movement. The aesthetic and social vision of the movement grew out of ideas that he developed in the 1850s with the Birmingham Set – a group of students at the University of Oxford including Edward Burne-Jones, who combined a love of Romantic literature with a commitment to social reform.[22] John William Mackail notes that "Carlyle's Past and Present stood alongside of [Ruskin's] Modern Painters as inspired and absolute truth."[23] The medievalism of Malory's Morte d'Arthur set the standard for their early style.[24] In Burne-Jones' words, they intended to "wage Holy warfare against the age".[25]

 
William Morris's Red House in Bexleyheath, designed by Philip Webb and completed in 1860; one of the most significant buildings of the Arts and Crafts movement[26]

Morris began experimenting with various crafts and designing furniture and interiors.[27] He was personally involved in manufacture as well as design,[27] which was the hallmark of the Arts and Crafts movement. Ruskin had argued that the separation of the intellectual act of design from the manual act of physical creation was both socially and aesthetically damaging. Morris further developed this idea, insisting that no work should be carried out in his workshops before he had personally mastered the appropriate techniques and materials, arguing that "without dignified, creative human occupation people became disconnected from life".[27]

 
The weaving shed in Morris & Co's factory at Merton, which opened in the 1880s

In 1861, Morris began making furniture and decorative objects commercially, modelling his designs on medieval styles and using bold forms and strong colours. His patterns were based on flora and fauna, and his products were inspired by the vernacular or domestic traditions of the British countryside. Some were deliberately left unfinished in order to display the beauty of the materials and the work of the craftsman, thus creating a rustic appearance. Morris strove to unite all the arts within the decoration of the home, emphasizing nature and simplicity of form.[28]

Social and design principles

Unlike their counterparts in the United States, most Arts and Crafts practitioners in Britain had strong, slightly incoherent, negative feelings about machinery. They thought of 'the craftsman' as free, creative, and working with his hands, 'the machine' as soulless, repetitive, and inhuman. These contrasting images derive in part from John Ruskin's (1819–1900) The Stones of Venice, an architectural history of Venice that contains a powerful denunciation of modern industrialism to which Arts and Crafts designers returned again and again. Distrust for the machine lay behind the many little workshops that turned their backs on the industrial world around 1900, using preindustrial techniques to create what they called 'crafts.'

— Alan Crawford, "W. A. S. Benson, Machinery, and the Arts and Crafts Movement in Britain"[29]

Critique of industry

William Morris shared Ruskin's critique of industrial society and at one time or another attacked the modern factory, the use of machinery, the division of labour, capitalism and the loss of traditional craft methods. But his attitude to machinery was inconsistent. He said at one point that production by machinery was "altogether an evil",[10] but at others times, he was willing to commission work from manufacturers who were able to meet his standards with the aid of machines.[30] Morris said that in a "true society", where neither luxuries nor cheap trash were made, machinery could be improved and used to reduce the hours of labour.[31] Fiona MacCarthy says that "unlike later zealots like Gandhi, William Morris had no practical objections to the use of machinery per se so long as the machines produced the quality he needed."[32]

Morris insisted that the artist should be a craftsman-designer working by hand[10] and advocated a society of free craftspeople, such as he believed had existed during the Middle Ages. "Because craftsmen took pleasure in their work", he wrote, "the Middle Ages was a period of greatness in the art of the common people. ... The treasures in our museums now are only the common utensils used in households of that age, when hundreds of medieval churches – each one a masterpiece – were built by unsophisticated peasants."[33] Medieval art was the model for much of Arts and Crafts design, and medieval life, literature and building was idealised by the movement.

Morris's followers also had differing views about machinery and the factory system. For example, C. R. Ashbee, a central figure in the Arts and Crafts movement, said in 1888, that, "We do not reject the machine, we welcome it. But we would desire to see it mastered."[10][34] After unsuccessfully pitting his Guild and School of Handicraft guild against modern methods of manufacture, he acknowledged that "Modern civilisation rests on machinery",[10] but he continued to criticise the deleterious effects of what he called "mechanism", saying that "the production of certain mechanical commodities is as bad for the national health as is the production of slave-grown cane or child-sweated wares."[35] William Arthur Smith Benson, on the other hand, had no qualms about adapting the Arts and Crafts style to metalwork produced under industrial conditions. (See quotation box.)

Morris and his followers believed the division of labour on which modern industry depended was undesirable, but the extent to which every design should be carried out by the designer was a matter for debate and disagreement. Not all Arts and Crafts artists carried out every stage in the making of goods themselves, and it was only in the twentieth century that that became essential to the definition of craftsmanship. Although Morris was famous for getting hands-on experience himself of many crafts (including weaving, dying, printing, calligraphy and embroidery), he did not regard the separation of designer and executant in his factory as problematic. Walter Crane, a close political associate of Morris's, took an unsympathetic view of the division of labour on both moral and artistic grounds, and strongly advocated that designing and making should come from the same hand. Lewis Foreman Day, a friend and contemporary of Crane's, as unstinting as Crane in his admiration of Morris, disagreed strongly with Crane. He thought that the separation of design and execution was not only inevitable in the modern world, but also that only that sort of specialisation allowed the best in design and the best in making.[36]

Few of the founders of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society insisted that the designer should also be the maker. Peter Floud, writing in the 1950s, said that "The founders of the Society ... never executed their own designs, but invariably turned them over to commercial firms."[37] The idea that the designer should be the maker and the maker the designer derived "not from Morris or early Arts and Crafts teaching, but rather from the second-generation elaboration doctrine worked out in the first decade of [the twentieth] century by men such as W. R. Lethaby".[37]

Socialism

Many of the Arts and Crafts movement designers were socialists, including Morris, T. J. Cobden Sanderson, Walter Crane, C.R. Ashbee, Philip Webb, Charles Faulkner, and A. H. Mackmurdo.[38] In the early 1880s, Morris was spending more of his time on promoting socialism than on designing and making.[39] Ashbee established a community of craftsmen called the Guild of Handicraft in east London, later moving to Chipping Campden.[7] Those adherents who were not socialists, such as Alfred Hoare Powell,[20] advocated a more humane and personal relationship between employer and employee. Lewis Foreman Day was another successful and influential Arts and Crafts designer who was not a socialist, despite his long friendship with Crane.

Association with other reform movements

In Britain, the movement was associated with dress reform,[40] ruralism, the garden city movement[6] and the folk-song revival. All were linked, in some degree, by the ideal of "the Simple Life".[41] In continental Europe the movement was associated with the preservation of national traditions in building, the applied arts, domestic design and costume.[42]

Development

Morris's designs quickly became popular, attracting interest when his company's work was exhibited at the 1862 International Exhibition in London. Much of this work is inspired by the Dictionnaire of Viollet le Duc. Most of Morris & Co's early work was for churches and Morris won important interior design commissions at St James's Palace and the South Kensington Museum (now the Victoria and Albert Museum). Later his work became popular with the middle and upper classes, despite his wish to create a democratic art, and by the end of the 19th century, Arts and Crafts design in houses and domestic interiors was the dominant style in Britain, copied in products made by conventional industrial methods.

The spread of Arts and Crafts ideas during the late 19th and early 20th centuries resulted in the establishment of many associations and craft communities, although Morris had little to do with them because of his preoccupation with socialism at the time. A hundred and thirty Arts and Crafts organisations were formed in Britain, most between 1895 and 1905.[43]

In 1881, Eglantyne Louisa Jebb, Mary Fraser Tytler and others initiated the Home Arts and Industries Association to encourage the working classes, especially those in rural areas, to take up handicrafts under supervision, not for profit, but in order to provide them with useful occupations and to improve their taste. By 1889 it had 450 classes, 1,000 teachers and 5,000 students.[44]

In 1882, architect A.H.Mackmurdo formed the Century Guild, a partnership of designers including Selwyn Image, Herbert Horne, Clement Heaton and Benjamin Creswick.[45][46]

In 1884, the Art Workers Guild was initiated by five young architects, William Lethaby, Edward Prior, Ernest Newton, Mervyn Macartney and Gerald C. Horsley, with the goal of bringing together fine and applied arts and raising the status of the latter. It was directed originally by George Blackall Simonds. By 1890 the Guild had 150 members, representing the increasing number of practitioners of the Arts and Crafts style.[47] It still exists.

The London department store Liberty & Co., founded in 1875, was a prominent retailer of goods in the style and of the "artistic dress" favoured by followers of the Arts and Crafts movement.

In 1887 the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society, which gave its name to the movement, was formed with Walter Crane as president, holding its first exhibition in the New Gallery, London, in November 1888.[48] It was the first show of contemporary decorative arts in London since the Grosvenor Gallery's Winter Exhibition of 1881.[49] Morris & Co. was well represented in the exhibition with furniture, fabrics, carpets and embroideries. Edward Burne-Jones observed, "here for the first time one can measure a bit the change that has happened in the last twenty years".[50] The society still exists as the Society of Designer Craftsmen.[51]

In 1888, C.R.Ashbee, a major late practitioner of the style in England, founded the Guild and School of Handicraft in the East End of London. The guild was a craft co-operative modelled on the medieval guilds and intended to give working men satisfaction in their craftsmanship. Skilled craftsmen, working on the principles of Ruskin and Morris, were to produce hand-crafted goods and manage a school for apprentices. The idea was greeted with enthusiasm by almost everyone except Morris, who was by now involved with promoting socialism and thought Ashbee's scheme trivial. From 1888 to 1902 the guild prospered, employing about 50 men. In 1902 Ashbee relocated the guild out of London to begin an experimental community in Chipping Campden in the Cotswolds. The guild's work is characterised by plain surfaces of hammered silver, flowing wirework and colored stones in simple settings. Ashbee designed jewellery and silver tableware. The guild flourished at Chipping Camden but did not prosper and was liquidated in 1908. Some craftsmen stayed, contributing to the tradition of modern craftsmanship in the area.[16][52][53]

C.F.A. Voysey (1857–1941) was an Arts and Crafts architect who also designed fabrics, tiles, ceramics, furniture and metalwork. His style combined simplicity with sophistication. His wallpapers and textiles, featuring stylised bird and plant forms in bold outlines with flat colors, were used widely.[16]

Morris's thought influenced the distributism of G. K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc.[54]

 
Coleton Fishacre was designed in 1925 as a holiday home in Kingswear, Devon, England, in the Arts and Crafts tradition.

By the end of the nineteenth century, Arts and Crafts ideals had influenced architecture, painting, sculpture, graphics, illustration, book making and photography, domestic design and the decorative arts, including furniture and woodwork, stained glass,[55] leatherwork, lacemaking, embroidery, rug making and weaving, jewelry and metalwork, enameling and ceramics.[56] By 1910, there was a fashion for "Arts and Crafts" and all things hand-made. There was a proliferation of amateur handicrafts of variable quality[57] and of incompetent imitators who caused the public to regard Arts and Crafts as "something less, instead of more, competent and fit for purpose than an ordinary mass produced article."[58]

The Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society held eleven exhibitions between 1888 and 1916. By the outbreak of war in 1914 it was in decline and faced a crisis. Its 1912 exhibition had been a financial failure.[59] While designers in continental Europe were making innovations in design and alliances with industry through initiatives such as the Deutsche Werkbund and new initiatives were being taken in Britain by the Omega Workshops and the Design in Industries Association, the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society, now under the control of an old guard, was withdrawing from commerce and collaboration with manufacturers into purist handwork and what Tania Harrod describes as "decommoditisation"[59] Its rejection of a commercial role has been seen as a turning point in its fortunes.[59] Nikolaus Pevsner in his book Pioneers of Modern Design presents the Arts and Crafts movement as design radicals who influenced the modern movement, but failed to change and were eventually superseded by it.[10]

Later influences

The British artist potter Bernard Leach brought to England many ideas he had developed in Japan with the social critic Yanagi Soetsu about the moral and social value of simple crafts; both were enthusiastic readers of Ruskin. Leach was an active propagandist for these ideas, which struck a chord with practitioners of the crafts in the inter-war years, and he expounded them in A Potter's Book, published in 1940, which denounced industrial society in terms as vehement as those of Ruskin and Morris. Thus the Arts and Crafts philosophy was perpetuated among British craft workers in the 1950s and 1960s, long after the demise of the Arts and Crafts movement and at the high tide of Modernism. British Utility furniture of the 1940s also derived from Arts and Crafts principles.[60]

One of its main promoters, Gordon Russell, chairman of the Utility Furniture Design Panel, was imbued with Arts and Crafts ideas. He manufactured furniture in the Cotswold Hills, a region of Arts and Crafts furniture-making since Ashbee, and he was a member of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society. William Morris's biographer, Fiona MacCarthy, detected the Arts and Crafts philosophy even behind the Festival of Britain (1951), the work of the designer Terence Conran (1931–2020)[6] and the founding of the British Crafts Council in the 1970s.[61]

By region

The British Isles

 
Stained glass window, The Hill House, Helensburgh, Argyll and Bute

Scotland

The beginnings of the Arts and Crafts movement in Scotland were in the stained glass revival of the 1850s, pioneered by James Ballantine (1806–1877). His major works included the great west window of Dunfermline Abbey and the scheme for St. Giles Cathedral, Edinburgh. In Glasgow it was pioneered by Daniel Cottier (1838–1891), who had probably studied with Ballantine, and was directly influenced by William Morris, Ford Madox Brown and John Ruskin. His key works included the Baptism of Christ in Paisley Abbey, (c. 1880). His followers included Stephen Adam and his son of the same name.[62]

The Glasgow-born designer and theorist Christopher Dresser (1834–1904) was one of the first, and most important, independent designers, a pivotal figure in the Aesthetic Movement and a major contributor to the allied Anglo-Japanese movement.[63] The movement had an "extraordinary flowering" in Scotland where it was represented by the development of the 'Glasgow Style' which was based on the talent of the Glasgow School of Art. Celtic revival took hold here, and motifs such as the Glasgow rose became popularised. Charles Rennie Mackintosh (1868–1928) and the Glasgow School of Art were to influence others worldwide.[1][56]

 
The Robert Owen Museum, Newtown, Wales, by Frank Shayler.

Wales

The situation in Wales was different than elsewhere in the UK. Insofar as craftsmanship was concerned, Arts and Crafts was a revivalist campaign. But in Wales, at least until World War I, a genuine craft tradition still existed. Local materials, stone or clay, continued to be used as a matter of course.[64]

Scotland become known in the Arts and Crafts movement for its stained glass; Wales would become known for its pottery. By the mid 19th century, the heavy, salt glazes used for generations by local craftsmen had gone out of fashion, not least as mass-produced ceramics undercut prices. But the Arts and Crafts Movement brought new appreciation to their work. Horace W Elliot, an English gallerist, visited the Ewenny Pottery (which dated back to the 17th century) in 1885, to both find local pieces and encourage a style compatible with the movement.[65] The pieces he brought back to London for the next twenty years revivified interest in Welsh pottery work.

A key promoter of the Arts and Crafts movement in Wales was Owen Morgan Edwards. Edwards was a reforming politician dedicated to renewing Welsh pride by exposing its people to their own language and history. For Edwards, "There is nothing that Wales requires more than an education in the arts and crafts."[66] – though Edwards was more inclined to resurrecting Welsh Nationalism than admiring glazes or rustic integrity.[67]

In architecture, Clough Williams-Ellis sought to renew interest in ancient building, reviving "rammed earth" or pisé[68] construction in Britain.

Ireland

The movement spread to Ireland, representing an important time for the nation's cultural development, a visual counterpart to the literary revival of the same time[69] and was a publication of Irish nationalism. The Arts and Crafts use of stained glass was popular in Ireland, with Harry Clarke the best-known artist and also with Evie Hone. The architecture of the style is represented by the Honan Chapel (1916) in Cork city in the grounds of University College Cork.[70] Other architects practicing in Ireland included Sir Edwin Lutyens (Heywood House in Co. Laois, Lambay Island and the Irish National War Memorial Gardens in Dublin) and Frederick 'Pa' Hicks (Malahide Castle estate buildings and round tower). Irish Celtic motifs were popular with the movement in silvercraft, carpet design, book illustrations and hand-carved furniture.

Continental Europe

In continental Europe, the revival and preservation of national styles was an important motive of Arts and Crafts designers; for example, in Germany, after unification in 1871 under the encouragement of the Bund für Heimatschutz (1897)[71] and the Vereinigte Werkstätten für Kunst im Handwerk founded in 1898 by Karl Schmidt; and in Hungary Károly Kós revived the vernacular style of Transylvanian building. In central Europe, where several diverse nationalities lived under powerful empires (Germany, Austria-Hungary and Russia), the discovery of the vernacular was associated with the assertion of national pride and the striving for independence, and, whereas for Arts and Crafts practitioners in Britain the ideal style was to be found in the medieval, in central Europe it was sought in remote peasant villages.[72]

 
The Swedish artists Carl Larsson and Karin Bergöö Larsson were inspired by the Arts and Crafts movement when designing their home.

Widely exhibited in Europe, the Arts and Crafts style's simplicity inspired designers like Henry van de Velde and styles such as Art Nouveau, the Dutch De Stijl group, Vienna Secession, and eventually the Bauhaus style. Pevsner regarded the style as a prelude to Modernism, which used simple forms without ornamentation.[10]

The earliest Arts and Crafts activity in continental Europe was in Belgium in about 1890, where the English style inspired artists and architects including Henry Van de Velde, Gabriel Van Dievoet, Gustave Serrurier-Bovy and a group known as La Libre Esthétique (Free Aesthetic).

Arts and Crafts products were admired in Austria and Germany in the early 20th century, and under their inspiration design moved rapidly forward while it stagnated in Britain.[73] The Wiener Werkstätte, founded in 1903 by Josef Hoffmann and Koloman Moser, was influenced by the Arts and Crafts principles of the "unity of the arts" and the hand-made. The Deutscher Werkbund (German Association of Craftsmen) was formed in 1907 as an association of artists, architects, designers, and industrialists to improve the global competitiveness of German businesses and became an important element in the development of modern architecture and industrial design through its advocacy of standardized production. However, its leading members, van de Velde and Hermann Muthesius, had conflicting opinions about standardization. Muthesius believed that it was essential were Germany to become a leading nation in trade and culture. Van de Velde, representing a more traditional Arts and Crafts attitude, believed that artists would forever "protest against the imposition of orders or standardization," and that "The artist ... will never, of his own accord, submit to a discipline which imposes on him a canon or a type." [74]

In Finland, an idealistic artists' colony in Helsinki was designed by Herman Gesellius, Armas Lindgren and Eliel Saarinen,[1] who worked in the National Romantic style, akin to the British Gothic Revival.

In Hungary, under the influence of Ruskin and Morris, a group of artists and architects, including Károly Kós, Aladár Körösfői-Kriesch and Ede Toroczkai Wigand, discovered the folk art and vernacular architecture of Transylvania. Many of Kós's buildings, including those in the Budapest zoo and the Wekerle estate in the same city, show this influence.[75]

In Russia, Viktor Hartmann, Viktor Vasnetsov, Yelena Polenova and other artists associated with Abramtsevo Colony sought to revive the quality of medieval Russian decorative arts quite independently from the movement in Great Britain.

In Iceland, Sölvi Helgason's work shows Arts and Crafts influence.

North America

 
Facade of the Castle in the Clouds and lawn overlooking Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hampshire, built 1913–4.
 
Warren Wilson Beach House (The Venice Beach House), Venice, California
 
Gamble House, Pasadena, California
 
Arts and Crafts Tudor Home in the Buena Park Historic District, Uptown, Chicago
 
Example of Arts and Crafts style influence on Federation architecture Observe the faceted bay window and the stone base.
 
Arts and Crafts home in the Birckhead Place neighborhood of Toledo, Ohio

In the United States, the Arts and Crafts style initiated a variety of attempts to reinterpret European Arts and Crafts ideals for Americans. These included the "Craftsman"-style architecture, furniture, and other decorative arts such as designs promoted by Gustav Stickley in his magazine, The Craftsman and designs produced on the Roycroft campus as publicized in Elbert Hubbard's The Fra. Both men used their magazines as a vehicle to promote the goods produced with the Craftsman workshop in Eastwood, NY and Elbert Hubbard's Roycroft campus in East Aurora, NY. A host of imitators of Stickley's furniture (the designs of which are often mislabelled the "Mission Style") included three companies established by his brothers.

The terms American Craftsman or Craftsman style are often used to denote the style of architecture, interior design, and decorative arts that prevailed between the dominant eras of Art Nouveau and Art Deco in the US, or approximately the period from 1910 to 1925. The movement was particularly notable for the professional opportunities it opened up for women as artisans, designers and entrepreneurs who founded and ran, or were employed by, such successful enterprises as the Kalo Shops, Pewabic Pottery, Rookwood Pottery, and Tiffany Studios. In Canada, the term Arts and Crafts predominates, but Craftsman is also recognized.[76]

While the Europeans tried to recreate the virtuous crafts being replaced by industrialisation, Americans tried to establish a new type of virtue to replace heroic craft production: well-decorated middle-class homes. They claimed that the simple but refined aesthetics of Arts and Crafts decorative arts would ennoble the new experience of industrial consumerism, making individuals more rational and society more harmonious. The American Arts and Crafts movement was the aesthetic counterpart of its contemporary political philosophy, progressivism. Characteristically, when the Arts and Crafts Society began in October 1897 in Chicago, it was at Hull House, one of the first American settlement houses for social reform.[77]

Arts and Crafts ideals disseminated in America through journal and newspaper writing were supplemented by societies that sponsored lectures.[77] The first was organized in Boston in the late 1890s, when a group of influential architects, designers, and educators determined to bring to America the design reforms begun in Britain by William Morris; they met to organize an exhibition of contemporary craft objects. The first meeting was held on January 4, 1897, at the Museum of Fine Arts (MFA) in Boston to organize an exhibition of contemporary crafts. When craftsmen, consumers, and manufacturers realised the aesthetic and technical potential of the applied arts, the process of design reform in Boston started. Present at this meeting were General Charles Loring, Chairman of the Trustees of the MFA; William Sturgis Bigelow and Denman Ross, collectors, writers and MFA trustees; Ross Turner, painter; Sylvester Baxter, art critic for the Boston Transcript; Howard Baker, A.W. Longfellow Jr.; and Ralph Clipson Sturgis, architect.

The first American Arts and Crafts Exhibition began on April 5, 1897, at Copley Hall, Boston featuring more than 1000 objects made by 160 craftsmen, half of whom were women.[78] Some of the advocates of the exhibit were Langford Warren, founder of Harvard's School of Architecture; Mrs. Richard Morris Hunt; Arthur Astor Carey and Edwin Mead, social reformers; and Will H. Bradley, graphic designer. The success of this exhibition resulted in the incorporation of The Society of Arts and Crafts (SAC), on June 28, 1897, with a mandate to "develop and encourage higher standards in the handicrafts." The 21 founders claimed to be interested in more than sales, and emphasized encouragement of artists to produce work with the best quality of workmanship and design. This mandate was soon expanded into a credo, possibly written by the SAC's first president, Charles Eliot Norton, which read:

This Society was incorporated for the purpose of promoting artistic work in all branches of handicraft. It hopes to bring Designers and Workmen into mutually helpful relations, and to encourage workmen to execute designs of their own. It endeavors to stimulate in workmen an appreciation of the dignity and value of good design; to counteract the popular impatience of Law and Form, and the desire for over-ornamentation and specious originality. It will insist upon the necessity of sobriety and restraint, or ordered arrangement, of due regard for the relation between the form of an object and its use, and of harmony and fitness in the decoration put upon it.[79]

Built in 1913–14 by the Boston architect J. Williams Beal in the Ossipee Mountains of New Hampshire, Tom and Olive Plant's mountaintop estate, Castle in the Clouds also known as Lucknow, is an excellent example of the American Craftsman style in New England.[80]

Also influential were the Roycroft community initiated by Elbert Hubbard in Buffalo and East Aurora, New York, Joseph Marbella, utopian communities like Byrdcliffe Colony in Woodstock, New York, and Rose Valley, Pennsylvania, developments such as Mountain Lakes, New Jersey, featuring clusters of bungalow and chateau homes built by Herbert J. Hapgood, and the contemporary studio craft style. Studio pottery – exemplified by the Grueby Faience Company, Newcomb Pottery in New Orleans, Marblehead Pottery, Teco pottery, Overbeck and Rookwood pottery and Mary Chase Perry Stratton's Pewabic Pottery in Detroit, the Van Briggle Pottery company in Colorado Springs, Colorado, as well as the art tiles made by Ernest A. Batchelder in Pasadena, California, and idiosyncratic furniture of Charles Rohlfs all demonstrate the influence of Arts and Crafts.

Architecture and art

The "Prairie School" of Frank Lloyd Wright, George Washington Maher and other architects in Chicago, the Country Day School movement, the bungalow and ultimate bungalow style of houses popularized by Greene and Greene, Julia Morgan, and Bernard Maybeck are some examples of the American Arts and Crafts and American Craftsman style of architecture. Restored and landmark-protected examples are still present in America, especially in California in Berkeley and Pasadena, and the sections of other towns originally developed during the era and not experiencing post-war urban renewal. Mission Revival, Prairie School, and the 'California bungalow' styles of residential building remain popular in the United States today.

As theoreticians, educators, and prolific artists in mediums from printmaking to pottery and pastel, two of the most influential figures were Arthur Wesley Dow (1857–1922) on the East Coast and Pedro Joseph de Lemos (1882–1954) in California. Dow, who taught at Columbia University and founded the Ipswich Summer School of Art, published in 1899 his landmark Composition, which distilled into a distinctly American approach the essence of Japanese composition, combining into a decorative harmonious amalgam three elements: simplicity of line, "notan" (the balance of light and dark areas), and symmetry of color.[81]

His purpose was to create objects that were finely crafted and beautifully rendered. His student de Lemos, who became head of the San Francisco Art Institute, Director of the Stanford University Museum and Art Gallery, and Editor-in-Chief of the School Arts Magazine, expanded and substantially revised Dow's ideas in over 150 monographs and articles for art schools in the United States and Britain.[82] Among his many unorthodox teachings was his belief that manufactured products could express "the sublime beauty" and that great insight was to be found in the abstract "design forms" of pre-Columbian civilizations.

Museums

The Museum of the American Arts and Crafts Movement in St. Petersburg, Florida, opened its doors in 2021.[83][84]

Asia

In Japan, Yanagi Sōetsu, creator of the Mingei movement which promoted folk art from the 1920s onwards, was influenced by the writings of Morris and Ruskin.[33] Like the Arts and Crafts movement in Europe, Mingei sought to preserve traditional crafts in the face of modernising industry.

Architecture

The movement ... represents in some sense a revolt against the hard mechanical conventional life and its insensibility to beauty (quite another thing to ornament). It is a protest against that so-called industrial progress which produces shoddy wares, the cheapness of which is paid for by the lives of their producers and the degradation of their users. It is a protest against the turning of men into machines, against artificial distinctions in art, and against making the immediate market value, or possibility of profit, the chief test of artistic merit. It also advances the claim of all and each to the common possession of beauty in things common and familiar, and would awaken the sense of this beauty, deadened and depressed as it now too often is, either on the one hand by luxurious superfluities, or on the other by the absence of the commonest necessities and the gnawing anxiety for the means of livelihood; not to speak of the everyday uglinesses to which we have accustomed our eyes, confused by the flood of false taste, or darkened by the hurried life of modern towns in which huge aggregations of humanity exist, equally removed from both art and nature and their kindly and refining influences.

-- Walter Crane, "Of The Revival of Design and Handicraft", in Arts and Crafts Essays, by Members of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society, 1893

Many of the leaders of the Arts and Crafts movement were trained as architects (e.g. William Morris, A. H. Mackmurdo, C. R. Ashbee, W. R. Lethaby) and it was on building that the movement had its most visible and lasting influence.

Red House, in Bexleyheath, London, designed for Morris in 1859 by architect Philip Webb, exemplifies the early Arts and Crafts style, with its well-proportioned solid forms, wide porches, steep roof, pointed window arches, brick fireplaces and wooden fittings. Webb rejected classical and other revivals of historical styles based on grand buildings, and based his design on British vernacular architecture, expressing the texture of ordinary materials, such as stone and tiles, with an asymmetrical and picturesque building composition.[16]

The London suburb of Bedford Park, built mainly in the 1880s and 1890s, has about 360 Arts and Crafts style houses and was once famous for its Aesthetic residents. Several Almshouses were built in the Arts and Crafts style, for example, Whiteley Village, Surrey, built between 1914 and 1917, with over 280 buildings, and the Dyers Almshouses, Sussex, built between 1939 and 1971. Letchworth Garden City, the first garden city, was inspired by Arts and Crafts ideals.[6]

The first houses were designed by Barry Parker and Raymond Unwin in the vernacular style popularized by the movement and the town became associated with high-mindedness and simple living. The sandal-making workshop set up by Edward Carpenter moved from Yorkshire to Letchworth Garden City and George Orwell's jibe about "every fruit-juice drinker, nudist, sandal-wearer, sex-maniac, Quaker, 'Nature Cure' quack, pacifist, and feminist in England" going to a socialist conference in Letchworth has become famous.[85]

Architectural examples

Garden design

Gertrude Jekyll applied Arts and Crafts principles to garden design. She worked with the English architect, Sir Edwin Lutyens, for whose projects she created numerous landscapes, and who designed her home Munstead Wood, near Godalming in Surrey.[86] Jekyll created the gardens for Bishopsbarns,[87] the home of York architect Walter Brierley, an exponent of the Arts and Crafts movement and known as the "Lutyens of the North".[88] The garden for Brierley's final project, Goddards in York, was the work of George Dillistone, a gardener who worked with Lutyens and Jekyll at Castle Drogo.[89] At Goddards the garden incorporated a number of features that reflected the arts and crafts style of the house, such as the use of hedges and herbaceous borders to divide the garden into a series of outdoor rooms.[90]

Another notable Arts and Crafts garden is Hidcote Manor Garden designed by Lawrence Johnston which is also laid out in a series of outdoor rooms and where, like Goddards, the landscaping becomes less formal further away from the house.[91] Other examples of Arts and Crafts gardens include Hestercombe Gardens, Lytes Cary Manor and the gardens of some of the architectural examples of arts and crafts buildings (listed above).

Art education

Morris's ideas were adopted by the New Education Movement in the late 1880s, which incorporated handicraft teaching in schools at Abbotsholme (1889) and Bedales (1892), and his influence has been noted in the social experiments of Dartington Hall during the mid-20th century.[61]

Arts and Crafts practitioners in Britain were critical of the government system of art education based on design in the abstract with little teaching of practical craft. This lack of craft training also caused concern in industrial and official circles, and in 1884 a Royal Commission (accepting the advice of William Morris) recommended that art education should pay more attention to the suitability of design to the material in which it was to be executed.[92] The first school to make this change was the Birmingham School of Arts and Crafts, which "led the way in introducing executed design to the teaching of art and design nationally (working in the material for which the design was intended rather than designing on paper). In his external examiner's report of 1889, Walter Crane praised Birmingham School of Art in that it 'considered design in relationship to materials and usage.'"[93] Under the direction of Edward Taylor, its headmaster from 1877 to 1903, and with the help of Henry Payne and Joseph Southall, the Birmingham School became a leading Arts-and-Crafts centre.[94]

 
George Frampton. Season ticket to The Arts and Craft Exhibition Society 1890.

Other local authority schools also began to introduce more practical teaching of crafts, and by the 1890s Arts and Crafts ideals were being disseminated by members of the Art Workers Guild into art schools throughout the country. Members of the Guild held influential positions: Walter Crane was director of the Manchester School of Art and subsequently the Royal College of Art; F.M. Simpson, Robert Anning Bell and C.J.Allen were respectively professor of architecture, instructor in painting and design, and instructor in sculpture at Liverpool School of Art; Robert Catterson-Smith, the headmaster of the Birmingham Art School from 1902 to 1920, was also an AWG member; W. R. Lethaby and George Frampton were inspectors and advisors to the London County Council's (LCC) education board and in 1896, largely as a result of their work, the LCC set up the Central School of Arts and Crafts and made them joint principals.[95] Until the formation of the Bauhaus in Germany, the Central School was regarded as the most progressive art school in Europe.[96] Shortly after its foundation, the Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts was set up on Arts and Crafts lines by the local borough council.

As head of the Royal College of Art in 1898, Crane tried to reform it along more practical lines, but resigned after a year, defeated by the bureaucracy of the Board of Education, who then appointed Augustus Spencer to implement his plan. Spencer brought in Lethaby to head its school of design and several members of the Art Workers' Guild as teachers.[95] Ten years after reform, a committee of inquiry reviewed the RCA and found that it was still not adequately training students for industry.[97]

In the debate that followed the publication of the committee's report, C.R.Ashbee published a highly critical essay, Should We Stop Teaching Art, in which he called for the system of art education to be completely dismantled and for the crafts to be learned in state-subsidised workshops instead.[98] Lewis Foreman Day, an important figure in the Arts and Crafts movement, took a different view in his dissenting report to the committee of inquiry, arguing for greater emphasis on principles of design against the growing orthodoxy of teaching design by direct working in materials. Nevertheless, the Arts and Crafts ethos thoroughly pervaded British art schools and persisted, in the view of the historian of art education, Stuart MacDonald, until after the Second World War.[95]

Leading practitioners

Decorative arts gallery

See also

References

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Bibliography and further reading

  • Ayers, Dianne (2002). American Arts and Crafts Textiles. New York: Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 0-8109-0434-9.
  • Blakesley, Rosalind P. The arts and crafts movement (Phaidon, 2006).
  • Boris, Eileen (1986). Art and Labor. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 0-87722-384-X.
  • Carruthers, Annette. The Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland: A History (2013) online review
  • Cathers, David M. (1981). Furniture of the American Arts and Crafts Movement. The New American Library, Inc. ISBN 0-453-00397-4.
  • Cathers, David M. (2014). So Various Are The Forms It Assumes: American Arts & Crafts Furniture from the Two Red Roses Foundation. Marquand Books. ISBN 978-0-692-21348-3.
  • Cathers, David M. (20 February 2017). These Humbler Metals: Arts and Crafts Metalwork from the Two Red Roses Foundation Collection. Marquand Books. ISBN 978-0-615-98869-6.
  • Cormack, Peter. Arts & crafts stained glass (Yale UP, 2015).
  • Cumming, Elizabeth; Kaplan, Wendy (1991). Arts & Crafts Movement. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-20248-6.
  • Cumming, Elizabeth (2006). Hand, Heart and Soul: The Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland. Birlinn. ISBN 978-1-84158-419-5.
  • Danahay, Martin. "Arts and Crafts as a Transatlantic Movement: CR Ashbee in the United States, 1896–1915." Journal of Victorian Culture 20.1 (2015): 65–86.
  • Greensted, Mary. The arts and crafts movement in Britain (Shire, 2010).
  • Johnson, Bruce (2012). Arts & Crafts Shopmarks. Fletcher, NC: Knock On Wood Publications. ISBN 978-1-4507-9024-6.
  • Kaplan, Wendy (1987). The Art that Is Life: The Arts & Crafts Movement in America 1875-1920. New York: Little, Brown and Company.
  • Kreisman, Lawrence, and Glenn Mason. The Arts & Craft Movement in the Pacific Northwest (Timber Press, 2007).
  • Krugh, Michele. "Joy in labour: The politicization of craft from the arts and crafts movement to Etsy." Canadian Review of American Studies 44.2 (2014): 281–301. online
  • Luckman, Susan. "Precarious labour then and now: The British arts and crafts movement and cultural work revisited." Theorizing Cultural Work (Routledge, 2014) pp. 33–43 online[dead link].
  • MacCarthy, Fiona (2009). "Morris, William (1834–1896), designer, author, and visionary socialist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19322. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • MacCarthy, Fiona (1994). William Morris. Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-17495-7.
  • Mascia-Lees, Frances E. "American Beauty: The Middle Class Arts and Crafts Revival in the United States." in Critical Craft (Routledge, 2020) pp. 57–77.
  • Meister, Maureen. Arts and Crafts Architecture: History and Heritage in New England (UP of New England, 2014).
  • Naylor, Gillian (1971). The Arts and Crafts Movement: a study of its sources, ideals and influence on design theory. London: Studio Vista. ISBN 0-289-79580-X.
  • Parry, Linda (2005). Textiles of the Arts and Crafts Movement. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-28536-5.
  • Penick, Monica, Christopher Long, and Harry Ransom Center, eds. The rise of everyday design: The arts and crafts movement in Britain and America (Yale UP, 2019).
  • Richardson, Margaret. Architects of the arts and crafts movement (1983)
  • Tankard, Judith B. Gardens of the Arts and Crafts Movement (Timber Press, 2018)
  • Teehan, Virginia; Heckett, Elizabeth (2005). The Honan Chapel: A Golden Vision. Cork: Cork University Press. ISBN 978-1-85918-346-5.
  • Thomas, Zoë. "Between Art and Commerce: Women, Business Ownership, and the Arts and Crafts Movement." Past & Present 247.1 (2020): 151–196. online
  • Triggs, Oscar Lovell. The arts & crafts movement (Parkstone International, 2014).
  • Wildman, Stephen (1998). Edward Burne-Jones, Victorian artist-dreamer. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 978-0-87099-858-4. Retrieved 26 December 2013.

External links

  • Fiona MacCarthy, "The old romantics", The Guardian, Saturday 5 March 2005 01.25 GMT
  • Furniture makers of America and Canada during the Arts & Crafts Movement
  • The first public museum exclusively dedicated to the American Arts & Crafts movement
  • Catalog lists with images of the major American Arts & Crafts furniture makers 2017-06-21 at the Wayback Machine

arts, crafts, movement, this, article, about, design, movement, handicrafts, generally, handicraft, other, uses, arts, crafts, disambiguation, international, trend, decorative, fine, arts, that, developed, earliest, most, fully, british, isles, subsequently, s. This article is about the art and design movement For handicrafts generally see Handicraft For other uses see Arts amp Crafts disambiguation The Arts and Crafts movement was an international trend in the decorative and fine arts that developed earliest and most fully in the British Isles 1 and subsequently spread across the British Empire and to the rest of Europe and America 2 William Morris design for Trellis wallpaper 1862 Initiated in reaction against the perceived impoverishment of the decorative arts and the conditions in which they were produced 3 the movement flourished in Europe and North America between about 1880 and 1920 It is the root of the Modern Style the British expression of what later came to be called the Art Nouveau movement which it strongly influenced 4 In Japan it emerged in the 1920s as the Mingei movement It stood for traditional craftsmanship and often used medieval romantic or folk styles of decoration It advocated economic and social reform and was anti industrial in its orientation 3 5 It had a strong influence on the arts in Europe until it was displaced by Modernism in the 1930s 1 and its influence continued among craft makers designers and town planners long afterwards 6 The term was first used by T J Cobden Sanderson at a meeting of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society in 1887 7 although the principles and style on which it was based had been developing in England for at least 20 years It was inspired by the ideas of historian Thomas Carlyle art critic John Ruskin and designer William Morris 8 In Scotland it is associated with key figures such as Charles Rennie Mackintosh 9 Contents 1 Origins and influences 1 1 Design reform 1 2 A W N Pugin 1 3 John Ruskin 1 4 William Morris 2 Social and design principles 2 1 Critique of industry 2 2 Socialism 2 3 Association with other reform movements 3 Development 3 1 Later influences 4 By region 4 1 The British Isles 4 1 1 Scotland 4 1 2 Wales 4 1 3 Ireland 4 2 Continental Europe 4 3 North America 4 3 1 Architecture and art 4 3 2 Museums 4 4 Asia 5 Architecture 5 1 Architectural examples 6 Garden design 7 Art education 8 Leading practitioners 9 Decorative arts gallery 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography and further reading 13 External linksOrigins and influences EditDesign reform Edit The Arts and Crafts movement emerged from the attempt to reform design and decoration in mid 19th century Britain It was a reaction against a perceived decline in standards that the reformers associated with machinery and factory production Their critique was sharpened by the items that they saw in the Great Exhibition of 1851 which they considered to be excessively ornate artificial and ignorant of the qualities of the materials used Art historian Nikolaus Pevsner writes that the exhibits showed ignorance of that basic need in creating patterns the integrity of the surface as well as displaying vulgarity in detail 10 Design reform began with Exhibition organizers Henry Cole 1808 1882 Owen Jones 1809 1874 Matthew Digby Wyatt 1820 1877 and Richard Redgrave 1804 1888 11 all of whom deprecated excessive ornament and impractical or badly made things 12 The organizers were unanimous in their condemnation of the exhibits 13 Owen Jones for example complained that the architect the upholsterer the paper stainer the weaver the calico printer and the potter produced novelty without beauty or beauty without intelligence 13 From these criticisms of manufactured goods emerged several publications that set out what the writers considered to be the correct principles of design Richard Redgrave s Supplementary Report on Design 1852 analysed the principles of design and ornament and pleaded for more logic in the application of decoration 12 Other works followed in a similar vein such as Wyatt s Industrial Arts of the Nineteenth Century 1853 Gottfried Semper s Wissenschaft Industrie und Kunst Science Industry and Art 1852 Ralph Wornum s Analysis of Ornament 1856 Redgrave s Manual of Design 1876 and Jones s Grammar of Ornament 1856 12 The Grammar of Ornament was particularly influential liberally distributed as a student prize and running into nine reprints by 1910 12 Jones declared that ornament must be secondary to the thing decorated that there must be fitness in the ornament to the thing ornamented and that wallpapers and carpets must not have any patterns suggestive of anything but a level or plain 14 A fabric or wallpaper in the Great Exhibition might be decorated with a natural motif made to look as real as possible whereas these writers advocated flat and simplified natural motifs Redgrave insisted that style demanded sound construction before ornamentation and a proper awareness of the quality of materials used Utility must have precedence over ornamentation 15 The Nature of Gothic by John Ruskin printed by William Morris at the Kelmscott Press in 1892 in his Golden Type inspired by the 15th century printer Nicolas Jenson This chapter from The Stones of Venice was a sort of manifesto for the Arts and Crafts movement However the design reformers of the mid 19th century did not go as far as the designers of the Arts and Crafts movement They were more concerned with ornamentation than construction they had an incomplete understanding of methods of manufacture 15 and they did not criticise industrial methods as such By contrast the Arts and Crafts movement was as much a movement of social reform as design reform and its leading practitioners did not separate the two A W N Pugin Edit Pugin s house The Grange in Ramsgate from 1843 Its simplified Gothic style adapted to domestic building helped shape the architecture of the Arts and Crafts movement Some of the ideas of the movement were anticipated by Augustus Pugin 1812 1852 a leader in the Gothic revival in architecture For example he advocated truth to material structure and function as did the Arts and Crafts artists 16 Pugin articulated the tendency of social critics to compare the faults of modern society with the Middle Ages 17 such as the sprawling growth of cities and the treatment of the poor a tendency that became routine with Ruskin Morris and the Arts and Crafts movement His book Contrasts 1836 drew examples of bad modern buildings and town planning in contrast with good medieval examples and his biographer Rosemary Hill notes that he reached conclusions almost in passing about the importance of craftsmanship and tradition in architecture that it would take the rest of the century and the combined efforts of Ruskin and Morris to work out in detail She describes the spare furnishings which he specified for a building in 1841 rush chairs oak tables as the Arts and Crafts interior in embryo 17 John Ruskin Edit The Arts and Crafts philosophy was derived in large measure from John Ruskin s social criticism deeply influenced by the work of Thomas Carlyle 18 Ruskin related the moral and social health of a nation to the qualities of its architecture and to the nature of its work Ruskin considered the sort of mechanized production and division of labour that had been created in the industrial revolution to be servile labour and he thought that a healthy and moral society required independent workers who designed the things that they made He believed factory made works to be dishonest and that handwork and craftsmanship merged dignity with labour 19 Ruskin was also heavily influenced by his contempory Viollet le Duc there is only one book of any value and that is the Dictionnaire of Viollet le Duc His followers favoured craft production over industrial manufacture and were concerned about the loss of traditional skills but they were more troubled by the effects of the factory system than by machinery itself 20 William Morris s idea of handicraft was essentially work without any division of labour rather than work without any sort of machinery 21 William Morris Edit William Morris a textile designer who was a key influence on the Arts and Crafts movement William Morris 1834 1896 was the towering figure in late 19th century design and the main influence on the Arts and Crafts movement The aesthetic and social vision of the movement grew out of ideas that he developed in the 1850s with the Birmingham Set a group of students at the University of Oxford including Edward Burne Jones who combined a love of Romantic literature with a commitment to social reform 22 John William Mackail notes that Carlyle s Past and Present stood alongside of Ruskin s Modern Painters as inspired and absolute truth 23 The medievalism of Malory s Morte d Arthur set the standard for their early style 24 In Burne Jones words they intended to wage Holy warfare against the age 25 William Morris s Red House in Bexleyheath designed by Philip Webb and completed in 1860 one of the most significant buildings of the Arts and Crafts movement 26 Morris began experimenting with various crafts and designing furniture and interiors 27 He was personally involved in manufacture as well as design 27 which was the hallmark of the Arts and Crafts movement Ruskin had argued that the separation of the intellectual act of design from the manual act of physical creation was both socially and aesthetically damaging Morris further developed this idea insisting that no work should be carried out in his workshops before he had personally mastered the appropriate techniques and materials arguing that without dignified creative human occupation people became disconnected from life 27 The weaving shed in Morris amp Co s factory at Merton which opened in the 1880s In 1861 Morris began making furniture and decorative objects commercially modelling his designs on medieval styles and using bold forms and strong colours His patterns were based on flora and fauna and his products were inspired by the vernacular or domestic traditions of the British countryside Some were deliberately left unfinished in order to display the beauty of the materials and the work of the craftsman thus creating a rustic appearance Morris strove to unite all the arts within the decoration of the home emphasizing nature and simplicity of form 28 Social and design principles EditUnlike their counterparts in the United States most Arts and Crafts practitioners in Britain had strong slightly incoherent negative feelings about machinery They thought of the craftsman as free creative and working with his hands the machine as soulless repetitive and inhuman These contrasting images derive in part from John Ruskin s 1819 1900 The Stones of Venice an architectural history of Venice that contains a powerful denunciation of modern industrialism to which Arts and Crafts designers returned again and again Distrust for the machine lay behind the many little workshops that turned their backs on the industrial world around 1900 using preindustrial techniques to create what they called crafts Alan Crawford W A S Benson Machinery and the Arts and Crafts Movement in Britain 29 Critique of industry Edit William Morris shared Ruskin s critique of industrial society and at one time or another attacked the modern factory the use of machinery the division of labour capitalism and the loss of traditional craft methods But his attitude to machinery was inconsistent He said at one point that production by machinery was altogether an evil 10 but at others times he was willing to commission work from manufacturers who were able to meet his standards with the aid of machines 30 Morris said that in a true society where neither luxuries nor cheap trash were made machinery could be improved and used to reduce the hours of labour 31 Fiona MacCarthy says that unlike later zealots like Gandhi William Morris had no practical objections to the use of machinery per se so long as the machines produced the quality he needed 32 Morris insisted that the artist should be a craftsman designer working by hand 10 and advocated a society of free craftspeople such as he believed had existed during the Middle Ages Because craftsmen took pleasure in their work he wrote the Middle Ages was a period of greatness in the art of the common people The treasures in our museums now are only the common utensils used in households of that age when hundreds of medieval churches each one a masterpiece were built by unsophisticated peasants 33 Medieval art was the model for much of Arts and Crafts design and medieval life literature and building was idealised by the movement Morris s followers also had differing views about machinery and the factory system For example C R Ashbee a central figure in the Arts and Crafts movement said in 1888 that We do not reject the machine we welcome it But we would desire to see it mastered 10 34 After unsuccessfully pitting his Guild and School of Handicraft guild against modern methods of manufacture he acknowledged that Modern civilisation rests on machinery 10 but he continued to criticise the deleterious effects of what he called mechanism saying that the production of certain mechanical commodities is as bad for the national health as is the production of slave grown cane or child sweated wares 35 William Arthur Smith Benson on the other hand had no qualms about adapting the Arts and Crafts style to metalwork produced under industrial conditions See quotation box Morris and his followers believed the division of labour on which modern industry depended was undesirable but the extent to which every design should be carried out by the designer was a matter for debate and disagreement Not all Arts and Crafts artists carried out every stage in the making of goods themselves and it was only in the twentieth century that that became essential to the definition of craftsmanship Although Morris was famous for getting hands on experience himself of many crafts including weaving dying printing calligraphy and embroidery he did not regard the separation of designer and executant in his factory as problematic Walter Crane a close political associate of Morris s took an unsympathetic view of the division of labour on both moral and artistic grounds and strongly advocated that designing and making should come from the same hand Lewis Foreman Day a friend and contemporary of Crane s as unstinting as Crane in his admiration of Morris disagreed strongly with Crane He thought that the separation of design and execution was not only inevitable in the modern world but also that only that sort of specialisation allowed the best in design and the best in making 36 Few of the founders of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society insisted that the designer should also be the maker Peter Floud writing in the 1950s said that The founders of the Society never executed their own designs but invariably turned them over to commercial firms 37 The idea that the designer should be the maker and the maker the designer derived not from Morris or early Arts and Crafts teaching but rather from the second generation elaboration doctrine worked out in the first decade of the twentieth century by men such as W R Lethaby 37 Socialism Edit Many of the Arts and Crafts movement designers were socialists including Morris T J Cobden Sanderson Walter Crane C R Ashbee Philip Webb Charles Faulkner and A H Mackmurdo 38 In the early 1880s Morris was spending more of his time on promoting socialism than on designing and making 39 Ashbee established a community of craftsmen called the Guild of Handicraft in east London later moving to Chipping Campden 7 Those adherents who were not socialists such as Alfred Hoare Powell 20 advocated a more humane and personal relationship between employer and employee Lewis Foreman Day was another successful and influential Arts and Crafts designer who was not a socialist despite his long friendship with Crane Association with other reform movements Edit In Britain the movement was associated with dress reform 40 ruralism the garden city movement 6 and the folk song revival All were linked in some degree by the ideal of the Simple Life 41 In continental Europe the movement was associated with the preservation of national traditions in building the applied arts domestic design and costume 42 Development EditMorris s designs quickly became popular attracting interest when his company s work was exhibited at the 1862 International Exhibition in London Much of this work is inspired by the Dictionnaire of Viollet le Duc Most of Morris amp Co s early work was for churches and Morris won important interior design commissions at St James s Palace and the South Kensington Museum now the Victoria and Albert Museum Later his work became popular with the middle and upper classes despite his wish to create a democratic art and by the end of the 19th century Arts and Crafts design in houses and domestic interiors was the dominant style in Britain copied in products made by conventional industrial methods The spread of Arts and Crafts ideas during the late 19th and early 20th centuries resulted in the establishment of many associations and craft communities although Morris had little to do with them because of his preoccupation with socialism at the time A hundred and thirty Arts and Crafts organisations were formed in Britain most between 1895 and 1905 43 In 1881 Eglantyne Louisa Jebb Mary Fraser Tytler and others initiated the Home Arts and Industries Association to encourage the working classes especially those in rural areas to take up handicrafts under supervision not for profit but in order to provide them with useful occupations and to improve their taste By 1889 it had 450 classes 1 000 teachers and 5 000 students 44 In 1882 architect A H Mackmurdo formed the Century Guild a partnership of designers including Selwyn Image Herbert Horne Clement Heaton and Benjamin Creswick 45 46 In 1884 the Art Workers Guild was initiated by five young architects William Lethaby Edward Prior Ernest Newton Mervyn Macartney and Gerald C Horsley with the goal of bringing together fine and applied arts and raising the status of the latter It was directed originally by George Blackall Simonds By 1890 the Guild had 150 members representing the increasing number of practitioners of the Arts and Crafts style 47 It still exists The London department store Liberty amp Co founded in 1875 was a prominent retailer of goods in the style and of the artistic dress favoured by followers of the Arts and Crafts movement In 1887 the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society which gave its name to the movement was formed with Walter Crane as president holding its first exhibition in the New Gallery London in November 1888 48 It was the first show of contemporary decorative arts in London since the Grosvenor Gallery s Winter Exhibition of 1881 49 Morris amp Co was well represented in the exhibition with furniture fabrics carpets and embroideries Edward Burne Jones observed here for the first time one can measure a bit the change that has happened in the last twenty years 50 The society still exists as the Society of Designer Craftsmen 51 In 1888 C R Ashbee a major late practitioner of the style in England founded the Guild and School of Handicraft in the East End of London The guild was a craft co operative modelled on the medieval guilds and intended to give working men satisfaction in their craftsmanship Skilled craftsmen working on the principles of Ruskin and Morris were to produce hand crafted goods and manage a school for apprentices The idea was greeted with enthusiasm by almost everyone except Morris who was by now involved with promoting socialism and thought Ashbee s scheme trivial From 1888 to 1902 the guild prospered employing about 50 men In 1902 Ashbee relocated the guild out of London to begin an experimental community in Chipping Campden in the Cotswolds The guild s work is characterised by plain surfaces of hammered silver flowing wirework and colored stones in simple settings Ashbee designed jewellery and silver tableware The guild flourished at Chipping Camden but did not prosper and was liquidated in 1908 Some craftsmen stayed contributing to the tradition of modern craftsmanship in the area 16 52 53 C F A Voysey 1857 1941 was an Arts and Crafts architect who also designed fabrics tiles ceramics furniture and metalwork His style combined simplicity with sophistication His wallpapers and textiles featuring stylised bird and plant forms in bold outlines with flat colors were used widely 16 Morris s thought influenced the distributism of G K Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc 54 Coleton Fishacre was designed in 1925 as a holiday home in Kingswear Devon England in the Arts and Crafts tradition By the end of the nineteenth century Arts and Crafts ideals had influenced architecture painting sculpture graphics illustration book making and photography domestic design and the decorative arts including furniture and woodwork stained glass 55 leatherwork lacemaking embroidery rug making and weaving jewelry and metalwork enameling and ceramics 56 By 1910 there was a fashion for Arts and Crafts and all things hand made There was a proliferation of amateur handicrafts of variable quality 57 and of incompetent imitators who caused the public to regard Arts and Crafts as something less instead of more competent and fit for purpose than an ordinary mass produced article 58 The Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society held eleven exhibitions between 1888 and 1916 By the outbreak of war in 1914 it was in decline and faced a crisis Its 1912 exhibition had been a financial failure 59 While designers in continental Europe were making innovations in design and alliances with industry through initiatives such as the Deutsche Werkbund and new initiatives were being taken in Britain by the Omega Workshops and the Design in Industries Association the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society now under the control of an old guard was withdrawing from commerce and collaboration with manufacturers into purist handwork and what Tania Harrod describes as decommoditisation 59 Its rejection of a commercial role has been seen as a turning point in its fortunes 59 Nikolaus Pevsner in his book Pioneers of Modern Design presents the Arts and Crafts movement as design radicals who influenced the modern movement but failed to change and were eventually superseded by it 10 Later influences Edit The British artist potter Bernard Leach brought to England many ideas he had developed in Japan with the social critic Yanagi Soetsu about the moral and social value of simple crafts both were enthusiastic readers of Ruskin Leach was an active propagandist for these ideas which struck a chord with practitioners of the crafts in the inter war years and he expounded them in A Potter s Book published in 1940 which denounced industrial society in terms as vehement as those of Ruskin and Morris Thus the Arts and Crafts philosophy was perpetuated among British craft workers in the 1950s and 1960s long after the demise of the Arts and Crafts movement and at the high tide of Modernism British Utility furniture of the 1940s also derived from Arts and Crafts principles 60 One of its main promoters Gordon Russell chairman of the Utility Furniture Design Panel was imbued with Arts and Crafts ideas He manufactured furniture in the Cotswold Hills a region of Arts and Crafts furniture making since Ashbee and he was a member of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society William Morris s biographer Fiona MacCarthy detected the Arts and Crafts philosophy even behind the Festival of Britain 1951 the work of the designer Terence Conran 1931 2020 6 and the founding of the British Crafts Council in the 1970s 61 By region EditThe British Isles Edit Stained glass window The Hill House Helensburgh Argyll and Bute Scotland Edit The beginnings of the Arts and Crafts movement in Scotland were in the stained glass revival of the 1850s pioneered by James Ballantine 1806 1877 His major works included the great west window of Dunfermline Abbey and the scheme for St Giles Cathedral Edinburgh In Glasgow it was pioneered by Daniel Cottier 1838 1891 who had probably studied with Ballantine and was directly influenced by William Morris Ford Madox Brown and John Ruskin His key works included the Baptism of Christ in Paisley Abbey c 1880 His followers included Stephen Adam and his son of the same name 62 The Glasgow born designer and theorist Christopher Dresser 1834 1904 was one of the first and most important independent designers a pivotal figure in the Aesthetic Movement and a major contributor to the allied Anglo Japanese movement 63 The movement had an extraordinary flowering in Scotland where it was represented by the development of the Glasgow Style which was based on the talent of the Glasgow School of Art Celtic revival took hold here and motifs such as the Glasgow rose became popularised Charles Rennie Mackintosh 1868 1928 and the Glasgow School of Art were to influence others worldwide 1 56 The Robert Owen Museum Newtown Wales by Frank Shayler Wales Edit The situation in Wales was different than elsewhere in the UK Insofar as craftsmanship was concerned Arts and Crafts was a revivalist campaign But in Wales at least until World War I a genuine craft tradition still existed Local materials stone or clay continued to be used as a matter of course 64 Scotland become known in the Arts and Crafts movement for its stained glass Wales would become known for its pottery By the mid 19th century the heavy salt glazes used for generations by local craftsmen had gone out of fashion not least as mass produced ceramics undercut prices But the Arts and Crafts Movement brought new appreciation to their work Horace W Elliot an English gallerist visited the Ewenny Pottery which dated back to the 17th century in 1885 to both find local pieces and encourage a style compatible with the movement 65 The pieces he brought back to London for the next twenty years revivified interest in Welsh pottery work A key promoter of the Arts and Crafts movement in Wales was Owen Morgan Edwards Edwards was a reforming politician dedicated to renewing Welsh pride by exposing its people to their own language and history For Edwards There is nothing that Wales requires more than an education in the arts and crafts 66 though Edwards was more inclined to resurrecting Welsh Nationalism than admiring glazes or rustic integrity 67 In architecture Clough Williams Ellis sought to renew interest in ancient building reviving rammed earth or pise 68 construction in Britain Ireland Edit The movement spread to Ireland representing an important time for the nation s cultural development a visual counterpart to the literary revival of the same time 69 and was a publication of Irish nationalism The Arts and Crafts use of stained glass was popular in Ireland with Harry Clarke the best known artist and also with Evie Hone The architecture of the style is represented by the Honan Chapel 1916 in Cork city in the grounds of University College Cork 70 Other architects practicing in Ireland included Sir Edwin Lutyens Heywood House in Co Laois Lambay Island and the Irish National War Memorial Gardens in Dublin and Frederick Pa Hicks Malahide Castle estate buildings and round tower Irish Celtic motifs were popular with the movement in silvercraft carpet design book illustrations and hand carved furniture Continental Europe Edit In continental Europe the revival and preservation of national styles was an important motive of Arts and Crafts designers for example in Germany after unification in 1871 under the encouragement of the Bund fur Heimatschutz 1897 71 and the Vereinigte Werkstatten fur Kunst im Handwerk founded in 1898 by Karl Schmidt and in Hungary Karoly Kos revived the vernacular style of Transylvanian building In central Europe where several diverse nationalities lived under powerful empires Germany Austria Hungary and Russia the discovery of the vernacular was associated with the assertion of national pride and the striving for independence and whereas for Arts and Crafts practitioners in Britain the ideal style was to be found in the medieval in central Europe it was sought in remote peasant villages 72 The Swedish artists Carl Larsson and Karin Bergoo Larsson were inspired by the Arts and Crafts movement when designing their home Widely exhibited in Europe the Arts and Crafts style s simplicity inspired designers like Henry van de Velde and styles such as Art Nouveau the Dutch De Stijl group Vienna Secession and eventually the Bauhaus style Pevsner regarded the style as a prelude to Modernism which used simple forms without ornamentation 10 The earliest Arts and Crafts activity in continental Europe was in Belgium in about 1890 where the English style inspired artists and architects including Henry Van de Velde Gabriel Van Dievoet Gustave Serrurier Bovy and a group known as La Libre Esthetique Free Aesthetic Arts and Crafts products were admired in Austria and Germany in the early 20th century and under their inspiration design moved rapidly forward while it stagnated in Britain 73 The Wiener Werkstatte founded in 1903 by Josef Hoffmann and Koloman Moser was influenced by the Arts and Crafts principles of the unity of the arts and the hand made The Deutscher Werkbund German Association of Craftsmen was formed in 1907 as an association of artists architects designers and industrialists to improve the global competitiveness of German businesses and became an important element in the development of modern architecture and industrial design through its advocacy of standardized production However its leading members van de Velde and Hermann Muthesius had conflicting opinions about standardization Muthesius believed that it was essential were Germany to become a leading nation in trade and culture Van de Velde representing a more traditional Arts and Crafts attitude believed that artists would forever protest against the imposition of orders or standardization and that The artist will never of his own accord submit to a discipline which imposes on him a canon or a type 74 In Finland an idealistic artists colony in Helsinki was designed by Herman Gesellius Armas Lindgren and Eliel Saarinen 1 who worked in the National Romantic style akin to the British Gothic Revival In Hungary under the influence of Ruskin and Morris a group of artists and architects including Karoly Kos Aladar Korosfoi Kriesch and Ede Toroczkai Wigand discovered the folk art and vernacular architecture of Transylvania Many of Kos s buildings including those in the Budapest zoo and the Wekerle estate in the same city show this influence 75 In Russia Viktor Hartmann Viktor Vasnetsov Yelena Polenova and other artists associated with Abramtsevo Colony sought to revive the quality of medieval Russian decorative arts quite independently from the movement in Great Britain In Iceland Solvi Helgason s work shows Arts and Crafts influence North America Edit Facade of the Castle in the Clouds and lawn overlooking Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hampshire built 1913 4 Warren Wilson Beach House The Venice Beach House Venice California Gamble House Pasadena California Arts and Crafts Tudor Home in the Buena Park Historic District Uptown Chicago Example of Arts and Crafts style influence on Federation architecture Observe the faceted bay window and the stone base Arts and Crafts home in the Birckhead Place neighborhood of Toledo Ohio In the United States the Arts and Crafts style initiated a variety of attempts to reinterpret European Arts and Crafts ideals for Americans These included the Craftsman style architecture furniture and other decorative arts such as designs promoted by Gustav Stickley in his magazine The Craftsman and designs produced on the Roycroft campus as publicized in Elbert Hubbard s The Fra Both men used their magazines as a vehicle to promote the goods produced with the Craftsman workshop in Eastwood NY and Elbert Hubbard s Roycroft campus in East Aurora NY A host of imitators of Stickley s furniture the designs of which are often mislabelled the Mission Style included three companies established by his brothers The terms American Craftsman or Craftsman style are often used to denote the style of architecture interior design and decorative arts that prevailed between the dominant eras of Art Nouveau and Art Deco in the US or approximately the period from 1910 to 1925 The movement was particularly notable for the professional opportunities it opened up for women as artisans designers and entrepreneurs who founded and ran or were employed by such successful enterprises as the Kalo Shops Pewabic Pottery Rookwood Pottery and Tiffany Studios In Canada the term Arts and Crafts predominates but Craftsman is also recognized 76 While the Europeans tried to recreate the virtuous crafts being replaced by industrialisation Americans tried to establish a new type of virtue to replace heroic craft production well decorated middle class homes They claimed that the simple but refined aesthetics of Arts and Crafts decorative arts would ennoble the new experience of industrial consumerism making individuals more rational and society more harmonious The American Arts and Crafts movement was the aesthetic counterpart of its contemporary political philosophy progressivism Characteristically when the Arts and Crafts Society began in October 1897 in Chicago it was at Hull House one of the first American settlement houses for social reform 77 Arts and Crafts ideals disseminated in America through journal and newspaper writing were supplemented by societies that sponsored lectures 77 The first was organized in Boston in the late 1890s when a group of influential architects designers and educators determined to bring to America the design reforms begun in Britain by William Morris they met to organize an exhibition of contemporary craft objects The first meeting was held on January 4 1897 at the Museum of Fine Arts MFA in Boston to organize an exhibition of contemporary crafts When craftsmen consumers and manufacturers realised the aesthetic and technical potential of the applied arts the process of design reform in Boston started Present at this meeting were General Charles Loring Chairman of the Trustees of the MFA William Sturgis Bigelow and Denman Ross collectors writers and MFA trustees Ross Turner painter Sylvester Baxter art critic for the Boston Transcript Howard Baker A W Longfellow Jr and Ralph Clipson Sturgis architect The first American Arts and Crafts Exhibition began on April 5 1897 at Copley Hall Boston featuring more than 1000 objects made by 160 craftsmen half of whom were women 78 Some of the advocates of the exhibit were Langford Warren founder of Harvard s School of Architecture Mrs Richard Morris Hunt Arthur Astor Carey and Edwin Mead social reformers and Will H Bradley graphic designer The success of this exhibition resulted in the incorporation of The Society of Arts and Crafts SAC on June 28 1897 with a mandate to develop and encourage higher standards in the handicrafts The 21 founders claimed to be interested in more than sales and emphasized encouragement of artists to produce work with the best quality of workmanship and design This mandate was soon expanded into a credo possibly written by the SAC s first president Charles Eliot Norton which read This Society was incorporated for the purpose of promoting artistic work in all branches of handicraft It hopes to bring Designers and Workmen into mutually helpful relations and to encourage workmen to execute designs of their own It endeavors to stimulate in workmen an appreciation of the dignity and value of good design to counteract the popular impatience of Law and Form and the desire for over ornamentation and specious originality It will insist upon the necessity of sobriety and restraint or ordered arrangement of due regard for the relation between the form of an object and its use and of harmony and fitness in the decoration put upon it 79 Built in 1913 14 by the Boston architect J Williams Beal in the Ossipee Mountains of New Hampshire Tom and Olive Plant s mountaintop estate Castle in the Clouds also known as Lucknow is an excellent example of the American Craftsman style in New England 80 Also influential were the Roycroft community initiated by Elbert Hubbard in Buffalo and East Aurora New York Joseph Marbella utopian communities like Byrdcliffe Colony in Woodstock New York and Rose Valley Pennsylvania developments such as Mountain Lakes New Jersey featuring clusters of bungalow and chateau homes built by Herbert J Hapgood and the contemporary studio craft style Studio pottery exemplified by the Grueby Faience Company Newcomb Pottery in New Orleans Marblehead Pottery Teco pottery Overbeck and Rookwood pottery and Mary Chase Perry Stratton s Pewabic Pottery in Detroit the Van Briggle Pottery company in Colorado Springs Colorado as well as the art tiles made by Ernest A Batchelder in Pasadena California and idiosyncratic furniture of Charles Rohlfs all demonstrate the influence of Arts and Crafts Architecture and art Edit The Prairie School of Frank Lloyd Wright George Washington Maher and other architects in Chicago the Country Day School movement the bungalow and ultimate bungalow style of houses popularized by Greene and Greene Julia Morgan and Bernard Maybeck are some examples of the American Arts and Crafts and American Craftsman style of architecture Restored and landmark protected examples are still present in America especially in California in Berkeley and Pasadena and the sections of other towns originally developed during the era and not experiencing post war urban renewal Mission Revival Prairie School and the California bungalow styles of residential building remain popular in the United States today As theoreticians educators and prolific artists in mediums from printmaking to pottery and pastel two of the most influential figures were Arthur Wesley Dow 1857 1922 on the East Coast and Pedro Joseph de Lemos 1882 1954 in California Dow who taught at Columbia University and founded the Ipswich Summer School of Art published in 1899 his landmark Composition which distilled into a distinctly American approach the essence of Japanese composition combining into a decorative harmonious amalgam three elements simplicity of line notan the balance of light and dark areas and symmetry of color 81 His purpose was to create objects that were finely crafted and beautifully rendered His student de Lemos who became head of the San Francisco Art Institute Director of the Stanford University Museum and Art Gallery and Editor in Chief of the School Arts Magazine expanded and substantially revised Dow s ideas in over 150 monographs and articles for art schools in the United States and Britain 82 Among his many unorthodox teachings was his belief that manufactured products could express the sublime beauty and that great insight was to be found in the abstract design forms of pre Columbian civilizations Museums Edit The Museum of the American Arts and Crafts Movement in St Petersburg Florida opened its doors in 2021 83 84 Asia Edit In Japan Yanagi Sōetsu creator of the Mingei movement which promoted folk art from the 1920s onwards was influenced by the writings of Morris and Ruskin 33 Like the Arts and Crafts movement in Europe Mingei sought to preserve traditional crafts in the face of modernising industry Architecture EditThe movement represents in some sense a revolt against the hard mechanical conventional life and its insensibility to beauty quite another thing to ornament It is a protest against that so called industrial progress which produces shoddy wares the cheapness of which is paid for by the lives of their producers and the degradation of their users It is a protest against the turning of men into machines against artificial distinctions in art and against making the immediate market value or possibility of profit the chief test of artistic merit It also advances the claim of all and each to the common possession of beauty in things common and familiar and would awaken the sense of this beauty deadened and depressed as it now too often is either on the one hand by luxurious superfluities or on the other by the absence of the commonest necessities and the gnawing anxiety for the means of livelihood not to speak of the everyday uglinesses to which we have accustomed our eyes confused by the flood of false taste or darkened by the hurried life of modern towns in which huge aggregations of humanity exist equally removed from both art and nature and their kindly and refining influences Walter Crane Of The Revival of Design and Handicraft in Arts and Crafts Essays by Members of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society 1893Many of the leaders of the Arts and Crafts movement were trained as architects e g William Morris A H Mackmurdo C R Ashbee W R Lethaby and it was on building that the movement had its most visible and lasting influence Red House in Bexleyheath London designed for Morris in 1859 by architect Philip Webb exemplifies the early Arts and Crafts style with its well proportioned solid forms wide porches steep roof pointed window arches brick fireplaces and wooden fittings Webb rejected classical and other revivals of historical styles based on grand buildings and based his design on British vernacular architecture expressing the texture of ordinary materials such as stone and tiles with an asymmetrical and picturesque building composition 16 The London suburb of Bedford Park built mainly in the 1880s and 1890s has about 360 Arts and Crafts style houses and was once famous for its Aesthetic residents Several Almshouses were built in the Arts and Crafts style for example Whiteley Village Surrey built between 1914 and 1917 with over 280 buildings and the Dyers Almshouses Sussex built between 1939 and 1971 Letchworth Garden City the first garden city was inspired by Arts and Crafts ideals 6 The first houses were designed by Barry Parker and Raymond Unwin in the vernacular style popularized by the movement and the town became associated with high mindedness and simple living The sandal making workshop set up by Edward Carpenter moved from Yorkshire to Letchworth Garden City and George Orwell s jibe about every fruit juice drinker nudist sandal wearer sex maniac Quaker Nature Cure quack pacifist and feminist in England going to a socialist conference in Letchworth has become famous 85 Architectural examples Edit Red House Bexleyheath Kent 1859 David Parr House Cambridge England 1886 1926 Wightwick Manor Wolverhampton England 1887 93 Inglewood Leicester England 1892 Standen East Grinstead England 1894 Swedenborgian Church San Francisco California 1895 Mary Ward House Bloomsbury London 1896 98 Blackwell Lake District England 1898 Derwent House Chislehurst Kent 1899 Stoneywell Ulverscroft Leicestershire 1899 The Arts amp Crafts Church Long Street Methodist Church and School Manchester England 1900 Spade House Sandgate Kent 1900 Caledonian Estate Islington London 1900 1907 Horniman Museum Forest Hill London 1901 All Saints Church Brockhampton 1901 02 Shaw s Corner Ayot St Lawrence Hertfordshire 1902 Pierre P Ferry House Seattle Washington 1903 1906 Winterbourne House Birmingham England 1904 The Black Friar Blackfriars London 1905 Marston House San Diego California 1905 Edgar Wood Centre Manchester England 1905 Debenham House Holland Park London 1905 07 Belrock Greater Sudbury Ontario 1907 Robert R Blacker House Pasadena California 1907 Stotfold Bickley Kent 1907 Gamble House Pasadena California 1908 Oregon Public Library Oregon Illinois 1909 Thorsen House Berkeley California 1909 Rodmarton Manor Rodmarton near Cirencester Gloucestershire 1909 29 Whare Ra Havelock North New Zealand 1912 Sutton Garden Suburb Benhilton Sutton London 1912 14 Castle in the Clouds Ossipee Mountains at Lake Winnipesaukee New Hampshire 1913 4 Honan Chapel University College Cork Ireland c 1916 St Francis Xavier s Cathedral Geraldton Western Australia 1916 1938 Bedales School Memorial Library near Petersfield Hampshire 1919 21Garden design EditGertrude Jekyll applied Arts and Crafts principles to garden design She worked with the English architect Sir Edwin Lutyens for whose projects she created numerous landscapes and who designed her home Munstead Wood near Godalming in Surrey 86 Jekyll created the gardens for Bishopsbarns 87 the home of York architect Walter Brierley an exponent of the Arts and Crafts movement and known as the Lutyens of the North 88 The garden for Brierley s final project Goddards in York was the work of George Dillistone a gardener who worked with Lutyens and Jekyll at Castle Drogo 89 At Goddards the garden incorporated a number of features that reflected the arts and crafts style of the house such as the use of hedges and herbaceous borders to divide the garden into a series of outdoor rooms 90 Another notable Arts and Crafts garden is Hidcote Manor Garden designed by Lawrence Johnston which is also laid out in a series of outdoor rooms and where like Goddards the landscaping becomes less formal further away from the house 91 Other examples of Arts and Crafts gardens include Hestercombe Gardens Lytes Cary Manor and the gardens of some of the architectural examples of arts and crafts buildings listed above Art education EditMorris s ideas were adopted by the New Education Movement in the late 1880s which incorporated handicraft teaching in schools at Abbotsholme 1889 and Bedales 1892 and his influence has been noted in the social experiments of Dartington Hall during the mid 20th century 61 Arts and Crafts practitioners in Britain were critical of the government system of art education based on design in the abstract with little teaching of practical craft This lack of craft training also caused concern in industrial and official circles and in 1884 a Royal Commission accepting the advice of William Morris recommended that art education should pay more attention to the suitability of design to the material in which it was to be executed 92 The first school to make this change was the Birmingham School of Arts and Crafts which led the way in introducing executed design to the teaching of art and design nationally working in the material for which the design was intended rather than designing on paper In his external examiner s report of 1889 Walter Crane praised Birmingham School of Art in that it considered design in relationship to materials and usage 93 Under the direction of Edward Taylor its headmaster from 1877 to 1903 and with the help of Henry Payne and Joseph Southall the Birmingham School became a leading Arts and Crafts centre 94 George Frampton Season ticket to The Arts and Craft Exhibition Society 1890 Other local authority schools also began to introduce more practical teaching of crafts and by the 1890s Arts and Crafts ideals were being disseminated by members of the Art Workers Guild into art schools throughout the country Members of the Guild held influential positions Walter Crane was director of the Manchester School of Art and subsequently the Royal College of Art F M Simpson Robert Anning Bell and C J Allen were respectively professor of architecture instructor in painting and design and instructor in sculpture at Liverpool School of Art Robert Catterson Smith the headmaster of the Birmingham Art School from 1902 to 1920 was also an AWG member W R Lethaby and George Frampton were inspectors and advisors to the London County Council s LCC education board and in 1896 largely as a result of their work the LCC set up the Central School of Arts and Crafts and made them joint principals 95 Until the formation of the Bauhaus in Germany the Central School was regarded as the most progressive art school in Europe 96 Shortly after its foundation the Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts was set up on Arts and Crafts lines by the local borough council As head of the Royal College of Art in 1898 Crane tried to reform it along more practical lines but resigned after a year defeated by the bureaucracy of the Board of Education who then appointed Augustus Spencer to implement his plan Spencer brought in Lethaby to head its school of design and several members of the Art Workers Guild as teachers 95 Ten years after reform a committee of inquiry reviewed the RCA and found that it was still not adequately training students for industry 97 In the debate that followed the publication of the committee s report C R Ashbee published a highly critical essay Should We Stop Teaching Art in which he called for the system of art education to be completely dismantled and for the crafts to be learned in state subsidised workshops instead 98 Lewis Foreman Day an important figure in the Arts and Crafts movement took a different view in his dissenting report to the committee of inquiry arguing for greater emphasis on principles of design against the growing orthodoxy of teaching design by direct working in materials Nevertheless the Arts and Crafts ethos thoroughly pervaded British art schools and persisted in the view of the historian of art education Stuart MacDonald until after the Second World War 95 Leading practitioners EditCharles Robert Ashbee William Swinden Barber Barnsley brothers Detmar Blow Herbert Tudor Buckland Rowland Wilfred William Carter T J Cobden Sanderson Walter Crane Nelson Dawson Lewis Foreman Day Christopher Dresser Dirk van Erp Thomas Phillips Figgis Eric Gill Ernest Gimson Greene amp Greene Elbert Hubbard Norman Jewson Ralph Johonnot Florence Koehler Frederick Leach William Lethaby Edwin Lutyens Charles Rennie Mackintosh A H Mackmurdo Samuel Maclure George Washington Maher Bernard Maybeck Henry Chapman Mercer Julia Morgan William De Morgan William Morris Karl Parsons Alfred Hoare Powell Edward Schroeder Prior Hugh C Robertson William Robinson Baillie Scott Norman Shaw Ellen Gates Starr Gustav Stickley Phoebe Anna Traquair C F A Voysey Philip Webb Margaret Ely Webb Christopher Whall Edgar Wood Charles RohlfsDecorative arts gallery Edit Gustav Stickley Dropfront Desk ca 1903 Brooklyn Museum William Morris Wallpaper Sample Compton 323 c 1917 Brooklyn Museum Newcomb Pottery Vase 1902 1904 Brooklyn Museum Mueller Mosaic Company Tile ca 1910 Brooklyn MuseumSee also EditModern Style British Art Nouveau style Philip Clissett The English House Charles Prendergast William Morris wallpaper designs William Morris textile designsReferences Edit a b c d Campbell Gordon 2006 The Grove Encyclopedia of Decorative Arts Volume 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518948 3 Wendy Kaplan and Alan Crawford The Arts amp Crafts movement in Europe amp America Design for the Modern World Los Angeles County Museum of Art a b Brenda M King Silk and Empire Arts and Crafts movement British and international movement Encyclopedia Britannica Moses N Ikiugu and Elizabeth A Ciaravino Psychosocial Conceptual Practice models in Occupational Therapy Arts and Crafts Style Guide British Galleries Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 17 July 2007 a b c d Fiona MacCarthy Anarchy and Beauty William Morris and his Legacy 1860 1960 London National Portrait Gallery 2014 ISBN 978 185514 484 2 a b Alan Crawford C R Ashbee Architect Designer amp Romantic Socialist Yale University Press 2005 ISBN 0 300 10939 3 Triggs Oscar Lovell 1902 Chapters in the History of the Arts and Crafts Movement Bohemia Guild of the Industrial Art League Sumpner Dave Morrison Julia 28 February 2020 My Revision Notes Pearson Edexcel A Level Design and Technology Product Design Hodder Education ISBN 978 1 5104 7422 2 a b c d e f g Nikolaus Pevsner Pioneers of Modern Design Yale University Press 2005 ISBN 0 300 10571 1 V amp A Wallpaper Design Reform a b c d Naylor 1971 p 21 a b Naylor 1971 p 20 Quoted in Nikolaus Pevsner Pioneers of Modern Design a b Naylor 1971 p 22 a b c d Victoria and Albert Museum Vam ac uk Retrieved 28 August 2010 a b Rosemary Hill God s Architect Pugin and the Building of Romantic Britain London Allen Lane 2007 Blakesley Rosalind P 2006 The arts and crafts movement London Phaidon ISBN 978 0 7148 3849 6 OCLC 1147708297 John Ruskin Artist Philosopher Writer Arts amp Crafts Leader www arts crafts com Archived from the original on 18 December 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2019 a b Jacqueline Sarsby Alfred Powell Idealism and Realism in the Cotswolds Journal of Design History Vol 10 No 4 pp 375 397 David Pye The Nature and Art of Workmanship Cambridge University Press 1968 Naylor 1971 pp 96 97 Mackail J W 2011 The Life of William Morris New York Dover Publications p 38 ISBN 978 0 486 28793 5 Wildman 1998 p 49 Naylor 1971 p 97 National Trust Iconic Arts and Crafts home of William Morris a b c MacCarthy 2009 The Arts and Crafts Movement in America The Metropolitan Museum of Art 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Alan Crawford W A S Benson Machinery and the Arts and Crafts Movement in Britain The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts Vol 24 Design Culture Identity The Wolfsonian Collection 2002 pp 94 117 Graeme Shankland William Morris Designer in Asa Briggs ed William Morris Selected Writings and Designs Harmondsworth Penguin 1980 ISBN 0 14 020521 7 William Morris Useful Work versus Useless Toil in Asa Briggs ed William Morris Selected Writings and Designs Harmondsworth Penguin 1980 ISBN 0 14 020521 7 MacCarthy 1994 p 351 a b Elisabeth Frolet Nick Pearce Soetsu Yanagi and Sori Yanagi Mingei The Living Tradition in Japanese Arts Japan Folk Crafts Museum Glasgow Museums Japan Kodashani International 1991 Ashbee C R A Few Chapters on Workshop Construction and Citizenship London 1894 C R Ashbee Should We Stop Teaching Art New York and London Garland 1978 p 12 Facsimile of the 1911 edition Designer and Executant An Argument Between Walter Crane and Lewis Foreman Day 19 June 2017 a b Peter Floud The crafts then and now The Studio 1953 p 127 Naylor 1971 p 109 MacCarthy 1994 p 640 663 V amp A Victorian Dress at the V amp A 14 January 2011 Fiona McCarthy The Simple Life Lund Humphries 1981 Arts and Crafts movement Retrieved 5 July 2019 MacCarthy 1994 p 602 Naylor 1971 p 120 MacCarthy 1994 p 591 Naylor 1971 p 115 MacCarthy 1994 p 593 Parry Linda William Morris and the Arts and Crafts Movement A Sourcebook New York Portland House 1989 ISBN 0 517 69260 0 Crane Walter Of the Arts and Crafts Movement in Ideals In Art Papers Theoretical Practical Critical George Bell amp Sons 1905 Chestofbooks com Retrieved 28 August 2010 MacCarthy 1994 p 596 Society of Designer Craftsmen Society of Designer Craftsmen Retrieved 28 August 2010 Utopia Britannica Utopia Britannica Retrieved 28 August 2010 Court Barn Museum Courtbarn org uk Archived from the original on 29 January 2010 Retrieved 28 August 2010 Letter Joseph Nuttgens London Review of Books 13 May 2010 p 4 Cormack Peter 2015 Arts and Crafts Stained Glass First ed New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 20970 9 a b Nicola Gordon Bowe and Elizabeth Cumming The Arts And Crafts Movements in Dublin and Edinburgh Arts and Crafts Journal of the Royal Society of Arts Vol 56 No 2918 23 October 1908 pp 1023 1024 Noel Rooke The Craftsman and Education for Industry in Four Papers Read by Members of the Arts amp Crafts Exhibition Society London Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society 1935 a b c Tania Harrod The Crafts in Britain in the 20th Century Yale University Press 1999 ISBN 0 300 07780 7 Designing Britain Archived May 15 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b MacCarthy 1994 p 603 M MacDonald Scottish Art London Thames and Hudson 2000 ISBN 0 500 20333 4 p 151 H Lyons Christopher Dresser The People Designer 1834 1904 Antique Collectors Club 2005 ISBN 1 85149 455 3 Hilling John B 15 August 2018 The Architecture of Wales From the First to the Twenty First Century University of Wales Press p 221 ISBN 978 1 78683 285 6 Arts and Crafts to Early Modernism 1900 to 1939 Aslet Clive 4 October 2010 Villages of Britain The Five Hundred Villages that Made the Countryside A amp C Black p 477 ISBN 978 0 7475 8872 6 Davies Hazel Council Welsh Arts 1 January 1988 O M Edwards University of Wales Press on behalf of Welsh Arts Council p 28 ISBN 978 0 7083 0997 1 Sec 3 Rothkirch Alyce von Williams Daniel 2004 Beyond the Difference Welsh Literature in Comparative Contexts Essays for M Wynn Thomas at Sixty University of Wales Press p 10 ISBN 978 0 7083 1886 7 CHS Vol PDF 2 May 2012 Archived PDF from the original on 22 December 2015 Nicola Gordon Bowe The Irish Arts and Crafts Movement 1886 1925 Irish Arts Review Yearbook 1990 91 pp 172 185 Teehan amp Heckett 2005 p 163 Akos Moravanszky Competing visions aesthetic invention and social imagination in Central European Architecture 1867 1918 Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1998 Andrej Szczerski Central Europe in Karen Livingstone and Linda Parry eds International Arts and Crafts London V amp A Publications 2005 Naylor 1971 p 183 Naylor 1971 p 189 Szeleky Andras Kos Karoly Budapest 1979 Metropolitan Museum of Art Monica Obniski The Arts and Crafts Movement in America Metmuseum org 20 February 1972 Retrieved 28 August 2010 a b Obniski The Arts amp Crafts Movement Concepts amp Styles The Art Story Retrieved 25 December 2020 Brandt Beverly Kay The Craftsman and the Critic Defining Usefulness and Beauty in the Arts and Crafts era Boston University of Massachusetts Press 2009 p 113 Cahn Lauren March 13 2019 The Most Famous House in Every State Image 29 Castle in the Clouds MSN com website Retrieved April 29 2019 Green Nancy E and Jessie Poesch 1999 Arthur Wesley Dow and American arts amp crafts New York NY Harry N Abrams Inc pp 55 126 ISBN 0 8109 4217 8 Edwards Robert W 2015 Pedro de Lemos Lasting Impressions Works on Paper Worcester Mass Davis Publications Inc pp 4 111 ISBN 978 1 61528 405 4 Construction Begins on 40 Million Museum of the American Arts amp Crafts in Florida ARTFIX Daily 18 February 2015 Retrieved 3 March 2015 Nichols Steve 18 February 2015 New bigger art museum coming to St Pete FOX 13 Pinellas Bureau Reporter Archived from the original on 21 February 2015 Retrieved 3 March 2015 George Orwell The Road to Wigan Pier Tankard Judith B and Martin A Wood Gertrude Jekyll at Munstead Wood Bramley Books 1998 Historic England Bishopsbarns 1256793 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 23 June 2016 The Art of Design PDF www nationaltrust org uk Archived PDF from the original on 28 August 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Historic England Castle Drogo park and garden 1000452 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 26 June 2016 The Gardens at Goddards www nationaltrust org uk Retrieved 26 June 2016 The Garden at Hidcote www nationaltrust org uk Retrieved 6 July 2016 Charles Harvey and Jon Press William Morris and the Royal Commission on Technical Instruction Journal of the William Morris Society 11 1 August 1994 pp 31 34 Archived 2015 01 05 at the Wayback Machine Birmingham Institute of Art and Design fineart ac uk Everitt Sian Keeper of Archives Birmingham Institute of Art and Design Retrieved 17 September 2011 a b c Stuart Macdonald The History and Philosophy of Art Education London University of London Press 1970 ISBN 0 340 09420 6 Naylor 1971 p 179 Report of the Departmental Committee on the Royal College of Art HMSO 1911 C R Ashbee Should We Stop Teaching Art 1911Bibliography and further reading EditAyers Dianne 2002 American Arts and Crafts Textiles New York Harry N Abrams ISBN 0 8109 0434 9 Blakesley Rosalind P The arts and crafts movement Phaidon 2006 Boris Eileen 1986 Art and Labor Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 0 87722 384 X Carruthers Annette The Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland A History 2013 online review Cathers David M 1981 Furniture of the American Arts and Crafts Movement The New American Library Inc ISBN 0 453 00397 4 Cathers David M 2014 So Various Are The Forms It Assumes American Arts amp Crafts Furniture from the Two Red Roses Foundation Marquand Books ISBN 978 0 692 21348 3 Cathers David M 20 February 2017 These Humbler Metals Arts and Crafts Metalwork from the Two Red Roses Foundation Collection Marquand Books ISBN 978 0 615 98869 6 Cormack Peter Arts amp crafts stained glass Yale UP 2015 Cumming Elizabeth Kaplan Wendy 1991 Arts amp Crafts Movement London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 20248 6 Cumming Elizabeth 2006 Hand Heart and Soul The Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 419 5 Danahay Martin Arts and Crafts as a Transatlantic Movement CR Ashbee in the United States 1896 1915 Journal of Victorian Culture 20 1 2015 65 86 Greensted Mary The arts and crafts movement in Britain Shire 2010 Johnson Bruce 2012 Arts amp Crafts Shopmarks Fletcher NC Knock On Wood Publications ISBN 978 1 4507 9024 6 Kaplan Wendy 1987 The Art that Is Life The Arts amp Crafts Movement in America 1875 1920 New York Little Brown and Company Kreisman Lawrence and Glenn Mason The Arts amp Craft Movement in the Pacific Northwest Timber Press 2007 Krugh Michele Joy in labour The politicization of craft from the arts and crafts movement to Etsy Canadian Review of American Studies 44 2 2014 281 301 online Luckman Susan Precarious labour then and now The British arts and crafts movement and cultural work revisited Theorizing Cultural Work Routledge 2014 pp 33 43 online dead link MacCarthy Fiona 2009 Morris William 1834 1896 designer author and visionary socialist Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19322 Subscription or UK public library membership required MacCarthy Fiona 1994 William Morris Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 17495 7 Mascia Lees Frances E American Beauty The Middle Class Arts and Crafts Revival in the United States in Critical Craft Routledge 2020 pp 57 77 Meister Maureen Arts and Crafts Architecture History and Heritage in New England UP of New England 2014 Naylor Gillian 1971 The Arts and Crafts Movement a study of its sources ideals and influence on design theory London Studio Vista ISBN 0 289 79580 X Parry Linda 2005 Textiles of the Arts and Crafts Movement London Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 28536 5 Penick Monica Christopher Long and Harry Ransom Center eds The rise of everyday design The arts and crafts movement in Britain and America Yale UP 2019 Richardson Margaret Architects of the arts and crafts movement 1983 Tankard Judith B Gardens of the Arts and Crafts Movement Timber Press 2018 Teehan Virginia Heckett Elizabeth 2005 The Honan Chapel A Golden Vision Cork Cork University Press ISBN 978 1 85918 346 5 Thomas Zoe Between Art and Commerce Women Business Ownership and the Arts and Crafts Movement Past amp Present 247 1 2020 151 196 online Triggs Oscar Lovell The arts amp crafts movement Parkstone International 2014 Wildman Stephen 1998 Edward Burne Jones Victorian artist dreamer New York Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 87099 858 4 Retrieved 26 December 2013 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arts and Crafts Movement Fiona MacCarthy The old romantics The Guardian Saturday 5 March 2005 01 25 GMT Furniture makers of America and Canada during the Arts amp Crafts Movement The first public museum exclusively dedicated to the American Arts amp Crafts movement Catalog lists with images of the major American Arts amp Crafts furniture makers Archived 2017 06 21 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arts and Crafts movement amp oldid 1152653554, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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