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Arts and
crafts
movement(1880s-1910s)
Outline
 Definition
 Birth of arts and crafts movement
 Influences
 Social reforms of arts and crafts movement
 Principles
 Characteristics
 Ideals from the art and crafts movement
 Architecture
 Features of arts and crafts movement houses
 John Ruskin
 William Morris
 Architects
 Decline of arts and crafts movement
 Arts and crafts movement in US
 Arts and crafts vs. Arts nouveau
Defining the Arts and Crafts
Movement
• The movement
represents in some
sense a revolt against
the hard mechanical
conventional life and
it's insensitivity to
beauty.
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.
Walter Crane a leading figure in the development of
the Arts and Crafts movement defined it as follows:
Birth of Arts and Crafts
Movement
Arts & Crafts 1875-1915 The
Arts & Crafts movement began
in Britain as a reaction to the
de-humanizing effects of the
late 19th century
industrialization.
A rose design for stained
glass by E.A Taylor.
It was a social and artistic movement of
the second half of the 19th cent.
emphasizing a return to handwork,
skilled craftsmanship, and attention to
design in the decorative arts, from the
mechanization and mass production of
the Industrial Revolution.
It was inspired by the ideas
of architect Augustus
Pugin (1812–1852),
writer John Ruskin (1819–
1900), and artist William
Morris (1834–1896).[
Some Key Forces which gave birth to the
movement
Rejection of Classical and Italianate
architecture, and the revival of the
Gothic Style. Rebellion against
industrialization and mass production by
machines.
Leading figures believed in a socialist
or utopian society, striving for good
quality of life for all, including art for the
people, by the people.
It was a reaction against a
decline in standards that the
reformers associated with
machinery and factory
production, and was in part a
response to items shown in the
Great Exhibition of 1851 that
were ornate, artificial and
ignored the qualities of the
materials used.
Nostalgia for the medieval age seen as the
golden age of creativity and freedom.
Artists and craftsman were viewed as
equals, art was no longer a separate or
superior activity.
The revival of craftsmanship, honesty in
construction, and truth to materials.
Influences
 Socialism - the ideas of John Ruskin
and early Marx, especially the
dehumanising effects of
industrialization
 Linear character and verticality
taken from graphic prints of William
Blake, Aubrey Beardsley, Jan Toorop
-Influence of Gothic revival
 Aesthetic ideas were also borrowed
from Medieval European and Islamic
sources
 Japanese ideas were also
incorporated early Arts and Crafts
forms
• Medieval Guilds provided a model
for the ideal craft production system
Social reforms of arts and
crafts movement
 change in working
condition
Believe in restoration
power of craftsmanship
Simple life
Arts as a way of life
Artisanal production
improved laborers’
conditions and edified
society
Principles
Design unity
Joy in labor
Individualism
Regionalism
Characteristics
Simple form and shape :
Simple forms were one of
the hallmarks of the Arts
and Crafts style.
There was no extravagant or
superfluous decoration
and the actual
construction of the object
was often exposed. Natural motifs : Nature
was an important source
of Arts and Crafts motifs.
The patterns used were
inspired by the flora and
fauna of the British
countryside.
• Truth to materials : Preserving
and emphasizing the natural
qualities of the materials used
to make objects was one of
the most important principles
of Arts and Crafts style. The vernacular :The vernacular,
or domestic, traditions of the
British countryside provided the
main inspiration for the Arts and
Crafts Movement. Many of
those involved set up workshops
in rural areas and revived old
techniques
Crafts skill required to
manufacture.
Manufactured by one skilled
person or a small group.
Not mass produced on
production line
Combination
of simplicity,
good design
and craft
work.
Stereo metric,
geometric, large
“vertical gothic”
windows, cubic forms,
rational
Flexible layout,
influenced the work of
Mies Van der Rohe.
fluid, delicate décor of
arches, entrance,
alcoves, stairs,
balustrade, interior or
details in wood and
metal
Traditional approaches
and materials such as
stone with it is massive
character mixed with
modern materials iron,
glass.
The movement
Rejected
 The eclectic
historicism and
excessive
ornamentation of
earlier and
concurrent
Victorian styles
 The cold,
impersonal
aesthetics brought
on by the Industrial
Revolution
Embraced
 A closer relationship
between designer,
maker, and object
 The integration of art
into life
 Objects and furniture
that were smaller, less
ornamented, more
hand-crafted
Ideals from the Arts and
Crafts Movement
The truth and beauty in these simple
ideals can be an inspiration in today's
busy and often crazy world. Here are a
few Craftsman Style ideals for you to
enjoy and use as you see fit:
simple, refined aesthetics (beauty)
simple, functional design (utility)
living simply
social reform (individuals more rational;
society more harmonious)
the virtue of a well decorated middle
class home
handcrafted objects
high quality craftsmanship
The joy of working and crafting with
one's own hands
Creating objects well designed and
affordable to all
Creating harmony with nature
Using and sustaining natural materials
Maintaining a sense of space and
environment
Staying spiritually connected to home
and nature
Creating space for inner peace away
from jobs and factories
Architecture
 In the nineteenth century the taste in design for
buildings moved away from Classical styles.
 In the place of classical styles the new
architectural styles of, first, Gothic Revival, and
then Arts and Crafts emerged
 Arts and Crafts architecture followed these
principles, allowing the function of the building
and the activities within it to determine the
outer shape and the construction, leaving out
excessive ornamental features.
 One departure from Gothic style was that Arts
and Crafts buildings tended to have graceful curved
arches rather than pointed and many were designed
on a modest scale, in styles reminiscent of the
manorial halls and half timbered cottages of Tudor
or Elizabethan England.
 The preference for local slate, and red brick, for
English Oak and for the cosy Inglenook fireplace
rather than ornate lead roofs and carved marble
chimney piece defined the Arts and Crafts style
 There was also a contrast in
values between classical
architecture and Arts and Crafts.
 Classical architecture was seen
as being built by slave labour or,
in more recent times, by wage
slaves, whereas Arts and Crafts
relied on a partnership between
designer and craftsman in which
the craftsman was highly
respected alongside the artist
and architect .
 There was too a greater concern
for equality, and a concern to
improve the quality of life which
a building could provide for its
occupants.
Features of the arts and
crafts movement houses
• Porch with thick
square or round
columns
• Stone porch
supports
•Wood ,stone, stucco :
sliding low pitched roof,
wide eaves with
triangular brackets.
•Exposed roof rafters
Exterior
chimney made
with stone
Open floor
plans; few
hallways
Beamed
ceilings
windows
with
stained
or
leaded
glass
Dark wood
wainscoting
and moldings
Built-in cabinets ,shelves
and seating's
Numerous
windows
John Ruskin Inspired by
Pugin,
Ruskin
advocated the
design of the
past, but was
not married to
Gothic Style
– or any one
style.
Writer and artist
• You must either make a tool of the creature, or a man
of him. You cannot make both. Men were not intended
to work with the accuracy of tools, to be precise and
perfect in all their actions. If you will have that precision
out of them, and make their fingers measure degrees
like cog-wheels and their arms strike curves like
compasses, you must unhumanize them...” John Ruskin,
The Stones of Venice: Volume II (1853)
• "And the great cry that rises from all our manufacturing
cities, louder than their furnace blast, is all in very deed
for this - that we manufacture everything there except
men; we blanch cotton, and strengthen steel, and refine
sugar, and shape pottery; but to brighten, to
strengthen, to refine, or to form a single living spirit,
never enters into our estimate of advantages." John
Ruskin, The Stones of Venice: Volume II (1853)
Ruskin style
 He is certainly one of the
greatest masters of English
prose style.
 In the earlier writings of
Ruskin, We find an
ornamental, gorgeous prose.
 Picturesque in his literary
expression.
 He is rich in the power of
illustration.
 Ruskin was not the inventor of
Pre-Raphaelitism or the Gothic
Revival
 Ruskin argued for the
secularization of the Gothic
and for its use in new
domestic buildings and
churches.
Ruskin believed in the power of art to
transform the lives of people
oppressed more by visual illiteracy
than by poor material conditions.
His creed was:
‘There is no
wealth but life
Sketches and watercolor by Ruskin
What we think,
or what we
know, or what
we believe is, in
the end, of little
consequence.
The only
consequence is
what we do.”
 The union of art and labour
in service to society, would
create the largest number of
happy human beings.
 Socialism
 Ruskin Believed that
machines and factory work
limited human happiness
 Advocated finding joy in
work through a closer
relationship with craft
Principles
 His thought is based on the
following
 Beauty and Art are closely
connected.
 Beauty has a moral
function: it helps us develop
a high moral sense;
 Art contributes to the
spiritual health of man.
 All great art derives from
deep morality.
 Industrial society, lacks
spiritual values, so cannot
produce great art;
 the Middle Ages society is
characterized by deep
morality.
William Morris (1834-
1896)
London, England. Morris was a brilliant two
dimensional pattern designer.
 In 1861 he founded his first
company which produced a wide
range of decorative objects for
the home including furniture,
fabrics, wallpaper and stained
glass.
William Morris was the central figure in
the Arts and Crafts Movement and one of
the most important and influential
designers in British History.
William Morris was an artist designer,
printer, typographer, bookbinder,
craftsman, poet, writer, and champion of
socialist ideals.
Founder of Morris & company ,The
kelmscott press
Morris combined his artistic skills with
strong political beliefs.
A committed conservationist and
Socialist, he dedicated his life to the idea
that art should improve the lives of
ordinary people.
 Inspired by
 - pre Raphaelite
brotherhood
 -writings of John Ruskin
He believes that nature was
perfect example of God’s
creation.
 The arts and crafts movement
was a reaction against the poor
quality of design during the
industrial revolution.
 The members of the arts and
crafts movement believed the
growth has destroyed
traditional skills and had
removed the pride that a
craftsman could find in his work.
 The members formed
themselves into crafts guilds,
based on the medieval
examples in order to encourage
high standards of design and
provide a supportive working
environment.
Red house
• Phillip webb
architect
The Red House
 The Red House, in
Bexleyheath, was designed
in 1858-1860 by Philip
Webb for his friend William
Morris.
 Webb rejected the grand
classical style and instead
found inspiration in British
vernacular architecture.
 With its well-proportioned
solid forms, deep porches,
steep roof, pointed window
arches, brick fireplaces and
wooden fittings,
 The Red House
characterizes the early Arts
and Crafts style
named because of
its red brick and tile
construction
Commissioned by Morris, Philip
Web built the Red House at
Bexley Heath in Kent.
The emphasis on basic form,
sound materials and good
craftsmanship had great appeal
to architects who in turn
contributed to a poetic phase
of European architecture.
 In building the house,
every brick and tile was
carefully selected and
placed to give variation of
colour and to avoid the
impression of any
mechanical uniformity.
 The Red House perhaps
the best known building
associated with the Arts
and Crafts movement and
appears in virtually every
book relating to Arts and
Crafts
The interior design included murals
by Burne-Jones and Rossetti and
massive furniture designed by Webb
and by Morris
the use of exposed red brick for the
exterior both gave the house its
name and reveals the innate beauty
of the construction materials.
Morris and Webb valued the specific
beauty of natural materials, which
they saw as far superior to and
healthier than industrially produced
materials.
Red House is L-shaped, with the
rooms laid out for maximum
efficiency and clarity. The L-shaped
plan also allows the house to embrace
the gardens as a part of the domestic
sphere, as well as creates an
asymmetry that is typical of
traditional Gothic structures that
were built over long periods of time.
The house was to represent a
protest against industrialism
through its:
Informality
Absence of decoration
Simple vernacular
The concept of an integral whole
extended to the interior design as
well. Webb, Morris, his wife, Jane,
and the painter Edward Burne-Jones
all worked together to design
everything in the home, from the
wallpaper to the stained-glass
windows to the built-in cabinets and
furniture, so that all celebrated the
beauty of nature and the medieval
guild ideal
Other original built-in
furniture is present in the
main living room on the
second floor, notably a
fireplace painted with Morris’s
motto.
 This room also has paintings
by Edward Burne-Jones.
The house is entered through a large
wooden door that leads to a rectangular
hallway. A settle Morris decorated with
illustrations from the medieval German
epic Niebelungenlied is to the right.
The hallway is filled with light from the
stained-glass windows. T
The original rustic dining room table
remains, along with the decorative arch in the
brickwork around the fireplace
the dining room to the right
contains the original hutch
designed by Philip Webb, which
has Gothic trefoil motifs and
is painted in “dragon’s blood” (a
deep red-brown favored by Arts
and Crafts practitioners).
Stained glass decorated by
Morris, his family and their
friends is found throughout the
house.
Architects
• The important contribution
of architects such as Pugin
and Voysey stems from
their involvement in the
design of furnishing and
decoration.
• They continued their
interest after the building
structure was complete,
and followed through into
interior design and
decorative art.
This interest beyond the architectural
started early in the history of the
movement when architects were unable
to find the right kind of furniture to
match the new style of buildings which
they had designed.
Neither the furniture available from
manufacturers at the time, nor the
antique furniture which could be
acquired fitted in with the new styles and
so architects designed furniture and
fittings to match the buildings and
interiors which they had created.
These architect-
designers left their
personal touch on the
smallest detail of the
design inside and
outside of the building.
As well as including
designs for furniture
,they often designed the
light fittings, wallpaper,
door furniture, and even
keys, window latches
,doorbells and clocks.
the design for a
clock by Charles
Voysey.
The objects made during the arts and crafts
movement were smaller, affordable such as
textiles, pottery, furniture etc.
Glasgow school of arts
Cr Ashbee (1863-1942)
 Influenced by
 socialism of William
Morris (established
guild and school of
handicraft in 1888 in
the slums of white
chapel)
 Works of John Ruskin
Charles Robert Ashbee was a major figure in the
Arts and Crafts Movement.
He designed many important pieces of jewelry
and silver tableware for the Guild of Handicraft,
which he established in 1888 in the East End of
London.
The Guild's work is characterized by plain
surfaces of hammered silver, flowing wirework
and colored stones in simple settings.
37 Cheyne Walk, London
37 Cheyne Walk was
built by C.R. Ashbee in
1893-1894.
 It was the home of his
mother and sister and
also contained Ashbee's
architectural offices.
The house was known
as The Ancient Magpie
and Stump after a public
house which once stood
on the site
W.R Lethaby (1857-1931)
 Influenced by
 His father and lay
preacher
 Society of protection
of ancient buildings
Phillip web• Architect of the first arts and
crafts building – the Red house
Philip Webb is often called the father of the
Arts & Crafts movement. Famous for his
comfortable, unpretentious country homes,
Philip Webb also designed furniture,
wallpaper, tapestries, and stained glass.
C. F. A. Voysey (1857-
1941)
 Charles Francis Annesley
Voysey was one of the
most innovative Arts
and Crafts architects.
 He was also a very
versatile designer and
produced designs for
wallpaper, fabrics, tiles,
ceramics, furniture and
metalwork.
Some of his patterns were used for objects in a
wide variety of materials. Voysey had a highly
original style which combined simplicity with
sophistication.
He became particularly famous for his
wallpaper and textile designs which feature
stylised bird and plant forms with bold
outlines and flat colours
The Orchard, Chorleywood
 C.F.A. Voysey designed The
Orchard in Chorleywood for
himself and his wife in 1899.
 Like other Arts and Crafts
designers, Voysey was interested
in vernacular traditions.
With its sparse
decoration and plain and
simple furnishings, The
Orchard was very
different from the usual
dark and cluttered
Victorian interior.
This simplicity
anticipates 20th-century
modern styles.
The Decline of Arts and Crafts
 Despite its high ideals, the Arts and Crafts Movement was
essentially flawed.
 Their opposition to modern methods of production and
the tendency to look back to the medieval world, rather
than forward to a progressive era of complete
mechanization, was what eventually sounded the death
knell of the movement.
 They could only fail in their socialist ideal of producing
affordable quality hand-crafted design for the masses as
the production costs of their designs were so high that
they could only be purchased by the wealthy.
 Also, any movement which continually looks to the past
for its inspiration must have a limited life span. There are
only so many ways you can reinterpret the past without
becoming repetitive.
 However,in time the English Arts and Crafts movement
came to stress craftsmanship at the expense of mass
market pricing.
 The result was exquisitely made and decorated pieces
that could only be afforded by the very wealthy.
 Thus the idea of art for the people was lost, and only
relatively few craftsman could be employed making
these fine pieces.
 This evolved English Arts and Crafts style came to be
known as "Aesthetic Style." It shared some
characteristics with the French/Belgian Art Nouveau
movement.
 However, the greatest legacy of
the Arts and Crafts movement
was their understanding of the
relationship between design
and our quality of life. This set
the example for others who
would later attempt to use the
power of industrial mass
production in the service of
good design. Some designers, such as
Christopher Dresser whose work
still looks remarkably modern,
started to reject the limitations of
the Arts and Crafts ideals and
positively embrace the techniques
of industrial manufacturing. This
was the start of a design evolution
that would eventually culminate in
the foundation of the Bauhaus
School of Art and Design which
became the prototype for art
education in the 20th century.DR. CHRISTOPHER DRESSER (1834-1904)
'Teapot', 1879
Arts and crafts movement in
us
 However in the United States, the Arts and Crafts ideal of design for the
masses was more fully realized, though at the expense of the fine
individualized craftsmanship typical of the English style.
 In New York, Gustav Stickley was trying to serve a burgeoning market of
middle class consumers who wanted affordable, decent looking
furniture. By using factory methods to produce basic components, and
utilizing craftsmen to finish and assemble, he was able to produce
sturdy, serviceable furniture which was sold in vast quantities, and still
survives.
 The rectilinear, simpler American Arts and Crafts forms came to
dominate American architecture, interiors, and furnishings in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth century.
 The term Mission style was also used to describe Arts and Crafts
Furniture and design in the United States. The use of this term reflects
the influence of traditional furnishings and interiors from the American
Southwest, which had many features in common with the earlier British
Arts and Crafts forms
 Charles and Henry Greenewere important Mission style architects
working in California.
 Southwestern style also incorporated Hispanic elements
associated with the early Mission and Spanish architecture, and
Native American design.
 The result was a blending of the arts and crafts rectilinear forms
with traditional Spanish colonial architecture and furnishings.
 Mission Style interiors were often embellished with Native
American patterns, or actual Southwestern Native American
artifacts such as rugs, pottery, and baskets.
 The collecting of Southwestern artifacts became very popular in
the first quarter of the twentieth century.
Arts and
Crafts
 Arts and Crafts developed in
England in the 1860s.
 Arts and Crafts focuses on
direct, handcrafted creations.
 The movement represents in
some sense a revolt against
the hard mechanical
conventional life and it's
insensitivity to beauty.
 Arts and Crafts designers
reacted against these
influences of the industrial
revolution, insisting on hand
techniques rather than
assembly lines.
 Primarily a decorative arts
movement about *how* things
are made .
Art Nouveau
 Art Nouveau arose in the
Belle Epoque of the 1890s
inParis, Munich (Jugendstil),
and Wiener (Sezession).
 Art Nouveau fully embraces
mass production with
brightly colored posters and
décortive style.
 Art Nouveau is a rejection of
the European Academic
Style
 Art Nouveau artists began to
bend metal and glass into
strange, new shapes.
 An art movement about
*what* is made .
Arts and crafts
 William Morris, naturally,
was extremely adamant
about staying far from
industrialized products.
 While Morris’ style was
more botanic and
decorative.
 Morris was customized.
Art Nouveau
 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec,
work were almost
completely mass-produced,
as he was responsible for
creating posters for the
Moulin Rouge cabaret.
 Lautrec relied on flat,
bold colors and strict
outlines.
 Lautrec was commercial.
Arts and Crafts Movement Guide

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Arts and Crafts Movement Guide

  • 2. Outline  Definition  Birth of arts and crafts movement  Influences  Social reforms of arts and crafts movement  Principles  Characteristics  Ideals from the art and crafts movement  Architecture  Features of arts and crafts movement houses  John Ruskin  William Morris  Architects  Decline of arts and crafts movement  Arts and crafts movement in US  Arts and crafts vs. Arts nouveau
  • 3. Defining the Arts and Crafts Movement • The movement represents in some sense a revolt against the hard mechanical conventional life and it's insensitivity to beauty. 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. Walter Crane a leading figure in the development of the Arts and Crafts movement defined it as follows:
  • 4. Birth of Arts and Crafts Movement Arts & Crafts 1875-1915 The Arts & Crafts movement began in Britain as a reaction to the de-humanizing effects of the late 19th century industrialization. A rose design for stained glass by E.A Taylor. It was a social and artistic movement of the second half of the 19th cent. emphasizing a return to handwork, skilled craftsmanship, and attention to design in the decorative arts, from the mechanization and mass production of the Industrial Revolution. It was inspired by the ideas of architect Augustus Pugin (1812–1852), writer John Ruskin (1819– 1900), and artist William Morris (1834–1896).[
  • 5. Some Key Forces which gave birth to the movement Rejection of Classical and Italianate architecture, and the revival of the Gothic Style. Rebellion against industrialization and mass production by machines. Leading figures believed in a socialist or utopian society, striving for good quality of life for all, including art for the people, by the people. It was a reaction against a decline in standards that the reformers associated with machinery and factory production, and was in part a response to items shown in the Great Exhibition of 1851 that were ornate, artificial and ignored the qualities of the materials used. Nostalgia for the medieval age seen as the golden age of creativity and freedom. Artists and craftsman were viewed as equals, art was no longer a separate or superior activity. The revival of craftsmanship, honesty in construction, and truth to materials.
  • 6. Influences  Socialism - the ideas of John Ruskin and early Marx, especially the dehumanising effects of industrialization  Linear character and verticality taken from graphic prints of William Blake, Aubrey Beardsley, Jan Toorop -Influence of Gothic revival  Aesthetic ideas were also borrowed from Medieval European and Islamic sources  Japanese ideas were also incorporated early Arts and Crafts forms • Medieval Guilds provided a model for the ideal craft production system
  • 7. Social reforms of arts and crafts movement  change in working condition Believe in restoration power of craftsmanship Simple life Arts as a way of life Artisanal production improved laborers’ conditions and edified society
  • 8. Principles Design unity Joy in labor Individualism Regionalism
  • 9. Characteristics Simple form and shape : Simple forms were one of the hallmarks of the Arts and Crafts style. There was no extravagant or superfluous decoration and the actual construction of the object was often exposed. Natural motifs : Nature was an important source of Arts and Crafts motifs. The patterns used were inspired by the flora and fauna of the British countryside.
  • 10. • Truth to materials : Preserving and emphasizing the natural qualities of the materials used to make objects was one of the most important principles of Arts and Crafts style. The vernacular :The vernacular, or domestic, traditions of the British countryside provided the main inspiration for the Arts and Crafts Movement. Many of those involved set up workshops in rural areas and revived old techniques Crafts skill required to manufacture. Manufactured by one skilled person or a small group. Not mass produced on production line
  • 11. Combination of simplicity, good design and craft work. Stereo metric, geometric, large “vertical gothic” windows, cubic forms, rational Flexible layout, influenced the work of Mies Van der Rohe. fluid, delicate décor of arches, entrance, alcoves, stairs, balustrade, interior or details in wood and metal Traditional approaches and materials such as stone with it is massive character mixed with modern materials iron, glass.
  • 12. The movement Rejected  The eclectic historicism and excessive ornamentation of earlier and concurrent Victorian styles  The cold, impersonal aesthetics brought on by the Industrial Revolution Embraced  A closer relationship between designer, maker, and object  The integration of art into life  Objects and furniture that were smaller, less ornamented, more hand-crafted
  • 13. Ideals from the Arts and Crafts Movement The truth and beauty in these simple ideals can be an inspiration in today's busy and often crazy world. Here are a few Craftsman Style ideals for you to enjoy and use as you see fit: simple, refined aesthetics (beauty) simple, functional design (utility) living simply social reform (individuals more rational; society more harmonious) the virtue of a well decorated middle class home handcrafted objects high quality craftsmanship
  • 14. The joy of working and crafting with one's own hands Creating objects well designed and affordable to all Creating harmony with nature Using and sustaining natural materials Maintaining a sense of space and environment Staying spiritually connected to home and nature Creating space for inner peace away from jobs and factories
  • 15. Architecture  In the nineteenth century the taste in design for buildings moved away from Classical styles.  In the place of classical styles the new architectural styles of, first, Gothic Revival, and then Arts and Crafts emerged  Arts and Crafts architecture followed these principles, allowing the function of the building and the activities within it to determine the outer shape and the construction, leaving out excessive ornamental features.  One departure from Gothic style was that Arts and Crafts buildings tended to have graceful curved arches rather than pointed and many were designed on a modest scale, in styles reminiscent of the manorial halls and half timbered cottages of Tudor or Elizabethan England.  The preference for local slate, and red brick, for English Oak and for the cosy Inglenook fireplace rather than ornate lead roofs and carved marble chimney piece defined the Arts and Crafts style
  • 16.  There was also a contrast in values between classical architecture and Arts and Crafts.  Classical architecture was seen as being built by slave labour or, in more recent times, by wage slaves, whereas Arts and Crafts relied on a partnership between designer and craftsman in which the craftsman was highly respected alongside the artist and architect .  There was too a greater concern for equality, and a concern to improve the quality of life which a building could provide for its occupants.
  • 17. Features of the arts and crafts movement houses • Porch with thick square or round columns • Stone porch supports •Wood ,stone, stucco : sliding low pitched roof, wide eaves with triangular brackets. •Exposed roof rafters Exterior chimney made with stone
  • 18. Open floor plans; few hallways Beamed ceilings windows with stained or leaded glass Dark wood wainscoting and moldings Built-in cabinets ,shelves and seating's Numerous windows
  • 19. John Ruskin Inspired by Pugin, Ruskin advocated the design of the past, but was not married to Gothic Style – or any one style. Writer and artist
  • 20.
  • 21. • You must either make a tool of the creature, or a man of him. You cannot make both. Men were not intended to work with the accuracy of tools, to be precise and perfect in all their actions. If you will have that precision out of them, and make their fingers measure degrees like cog-wheels and their arms strike curves like compasses, you must unhumanize them...” John Ruskin, The Stones of Venice: Volume II (1853) • "And the great cry that rises from all our manufacturing cities, louder than their furnace blast, is all in very deed for this - that we manufacture everything there except men; we blanch cotton, and strengthen steel, and refine sugar, and shape pottery; but to brighten, to strengthen, to refine, or to form a single living spirit, never enters into our estimate of advantages." John Ruskin, The Stones of Venice: Volume II (1853)
  • 22. Ruskin style  He is certainly one of the greatest masters of English prose style.  In the earlier writings of Ruskin, We find an ornamental, gorgeous prose.  Picturesque in his literary expression.  He is rich in the power of illustration.  Ruskin was not the inventor of Pre-Raphaelitism or the Gothic Revival  Ruskin argued for the secularization of the Gothic and for its use in new domestic buildings and churches. Ruskin believed in the power of art to transform the lives of people oppressed more by visual illiteracy than by poor material conditions. His creed was: ‘There is no wealth but life
  • 23. Sketches and watercolor by Ruskin What we think, or what we know, or what we believe is, in the end, of little consequence. The only consequence is what we do.”  The union of art and labour in service to society, would create the largest number of happy human beings.  Socialism  Ruskin Believed that machines and factory work limited human happiness  Advocated finding joy in work through a closer relationship with craft
  • 24. Principles  His thought is based on the following  Beauty and Art are closely connected.  Beauty has a moral function: it helps us develop a high moral sense;  Art contributes to the spiritual health of man.  All great art derives from deep morality.  Industrial society, lacks spiritual values, so cannot produce great art;  the Middle Ages society is characterized by deep morality.
  • 25. William Morris (1834- 1896) London, England. Morris was a brilliant two dimensional pattern designer.  In 1861 he founded his first company which produced a wide range of decorative objects for the home including furniture, fabrics, wallpaper and stained glass. William Morris was the central figure in the Arts and Crafts Movement and one of the most important and influential designers in British History. William Morris was an artist designer, printer, typographer, bookbinder, craftsman, poet, writer, and champion of socialist ideals. Founder of Morris & company ,The kelmscott press Morris combined his artistic skills with strong political beliefs. A committed conservationist and Socialist, he dedicated his life to the idea that art should improve the lives of ordinary people.
  • 26.  Inspired by  - pre Raphaelite brotherhood  -writings of John Ruskin He believes that nature was perfect example of God’s creation.
  • 27.  The arts and crafts movement was a reaction against the poor quality of design during the industrial revolution.  The members of the arts and crafts movement believed the growth has destroyed traditional skills and had removed the pride that a craftsman could find in his work.  The members formed themselves into crafts guilds, based on the medieval examples in order to encourage high standards of design and provide a supportive working environment.
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 30. Red house • Phillip webb architect
  • 31. The Red House  The Red House, in Bexleyheath, was designed in 1858-1860 by Philip Webb for his friend William Morris.  Webb rejected the grand classical style and instead found inspiration in British vernacular architecture.  With its well-proportioned solid forms, deep porches, steep roof, pointed window arches, brick fireplaces and wooden fittings,  The Red House characterizes the early Arts and Crafts style named because of its red brick and tile construction Commissioned by Morris, Philip Web built the Red House at Bexley Heath in Kent. The emphasis on basic form, sound materials and good craftsmanship had great appeal to architects who in turn contributed to a poetic phase of European architecture.
  • 32.  In building the house, every brick and tile was carefully selected and placed to give variation of colour and to avoid the impression of any mechanical uniformity.  The Red House perhaps the best known building associated with the Arts and Crafts movement and appears in virtually every book relating to Arts and Crafts The interior design included murals by Burne-Jones and Rossetti and massive furniture designed by Webb and by Morris
  • 33. the use of exposed red brick for the exterior both gave the house its name and reveals the innate beauty of the construction materials. Morris and Webb valued the specific beauty of natural materials, which they saw as far superior to and healthier than industrially produced materials. Red House is L-shaped, with the rooms laid out for maximum efficiency and clarity. The L-shaped plan also allows the house to embrace the gardens as a part of the domestic sphere, as well as creates an asymmetry that is typical of traditional Gothic structures that were built over long periods of time.
  • 34. The house was to represent a protest against industrialism through its: Informality Absence of decoration Simple vernacular The concept of an integral whole extended to the interior design as well. Webb, Morris, his wife, Jane, and the painter Edward Burne-Jones all worked together to design everything in the home, from the wallpaper to the stained-glass windows to the built-in cabinets and furniture, so that all celebrated the beauty of nature and the medieval guild ideal
  • 35. Other original built-in furniture is present in the main living room on the second floor, notably a fireplace painted with Morris’s motto.  This room also has paintings by Edward Burne-Jones. The house is entered through a large wooden door that leads to a rectangular hallway. A settle Morris decorated with illustrations from the medieval German epic Niebelungenlied is to the right. The hallway is filled with light from the stained-glass windows. T The original rustic dining room table remains, along with the decorative arch in the brickwork around the fireplace the dining room to the right contains the original hutch designed by Philip Webb, which has Gothic trefoil motifs and is painted in “dragon’s blood” (a deep red-brown favored by Arts and Crafts practitioners). Stained glass decorated by Morris, his family and their friends is found throughout the house.
  • 36. Architects • The important contribution of architects such as Pugin and Voysey stems from their involvement in the design of furnishing and decoration. • They continued their interest after the building structure was complete, and followed through into interior design and decorative art. This interest beyond the architectural started early in the history of the movement when architects were unable to find the right kind of furniture to match the new style of buildings which they had designed. Neither the furniture available from manufacturers at the time, nor the antique furniture which could be acquired fitted in with the new styles and so architects designed furniture and fittings to match the buildings and interiors which they had created.
  • 37. These architect- designers left their personal touch on the smallest detail of the design inside and outside of the building. As well as including designs for furniture ,they often designed the light fittings, wallpaper, door furniture, and even keys, window latches ,doorbells and clocks. the design for a clock by Charles Voysey.
  • 38. The objects made during the arts and crafts movement were smaller, affordable such as textiles, pottery, furniture etc.
  • 40.
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 43.
  • 44.
  • 45. Cr Ashbee (1863-1942)  Influenced by  socialism of William Morris (established guild and school of handicraft in 1888 in the slums of white chapel)  Works of John Ruskin Charles Robert Ashbee was a major figure in the Arts and Crafts Movement. He designed many important pieces of jewelry and silver tableware for the Guild of Handicraft, which he established in 1888 in the East End of London. The Guild's work is characterized by plain surfaces of hammered silver, flowing wirework and colored stones in simple settings.
  • 46. 37 Cheyne Walk, London 37 Cheyne Walk was built by C.R. Ashbee in 1893-1894.  It was the home of his mother and sister and also contained Ashbee's architectural offices. The house was known as The Ancient Magpie and Stump after a public house which once stood on the site
  • 47. W.R Lethaby (1857-1931)  Influenced by  His father and lay preacher  Society of protection of ancient buildings
  • 48. Phillip web• Architect of the first arts and crafts building – the Red house Philip Webb is often called the father of the Arts & Crafts movement. Famous for his comfortable, unpretentious country homes, Philip Webb also designed furniture, wallpaper, tapestries, and stained glass.
  • 49. C. F. A. Voysey (1857- 1941)  Charles Francis Annesley Voysey was one of the most innovative Arts and Crafts architects.  He was also a very versatile designer and produced designs for wallpaper, fabrics, tiles, ceramics, furniture and metalwork. Some of his patterns were used for objects in a wide variety of materials. Voysey had a highly original style which combined simplicity with sophistication. He became particularly famous for his wallpaper and textile designs which feature stylised bird and plant forms with bold outlines and flat colours
  • 50. The Orchard, Chorleywood  C.F.A. Voysey designed The Orchard in Chorleywood for himself and his wife in 1899.  Like other Arts and Crafts designers, Voysey was interested in vernacular traditions. With its sparse decoration and plain and simple furnishings, The Orchard was very different from the usual dark and cluttered Victorian interior. This simplicity anticipates 20th-century modern styles.
  • 51. The Decline of Arts and Crafts  Despite its high ideals, the Arts and Crafts Movement was essentially flawed.  Their opposition to modern methods of production and the tendency to look back to the medieval world, rather than forward to a progressive era of complete mechanization, was what eventually sounded the death knell of the movement.  They could only fail in their socialist ideal of producing affordable quality hand-crafted design for the masses as the production costs of their designs were so high that they could only be purchased by the wealthy.  Also, any movement which continually looks to the past for its inspiration must have a limited life span. There are only so many ways you can reinterpret the past without becoming repetitive.
  • 52.  However,in time the English Arts and Crafts movement came to stress craftsmanship at the expense of mass market pricing.  The result was exquisitely made and decorated pieces that could only be afforded by the very wealthy.  Thus the idea of art for the people was lost, and only relatively few craftsman could be employed making these fine pieces.  This evolved English Arts and Crafts style came to be known as "Aesthetic Style." It shared some characteristics with the French/Belgian Art Nouveau movement.
  • 53.  However, the greatest legacy of the Arts and Crafts movement was their understanding of the relationship between design and our quality of life. This set the example for others who would later attempt to use the power of industrial mass production in the service of good design. Some designers, such as Christopher Dresser whose work still looks remarkably modern, started to reject the limitations of the Arts and Crafts ideals and positively embrace the techniques of industrial manufacturing. This was the start of a design evolution that would eventually culminate in the foundation of the Bauhaus School of Art and Design which became the prototype for art education in the 20th century.DR. CHRISTOPHER DRESSER (1834-1904) 'Teapot', 1879
  • 54. Arts and crafts movement in us  However in the United States, the Arts and Crafts ideal of design for the masses was more fully realized, though at the expense of the fine individualized craftsmanship typical of the English style.  In New York, Gustav Stickley was trying to serve a burgeoning market of middle class consumers who wanted affordable, decent looking furniture. By using factory methods to produce basic components, and utilizing craftsmen to finish and assemble, he was able to produce sturdy, serviceable furniture which was sold in vast quantities, and still survives.  The rectilinear, simpler American Arts and Crafts forms came to dominate American architecture, interiors, and furnishings in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.  The term Mission style was also used to describe Arts and Crafts Furniture and design in the United States. The use of this term reflects the influence of traditional furnishings and interiors from the American Southwest, which had many features in common with the earlier British Arts and Crafts forms
  • 55.  Charles and Henry Greenewere important Mission style architects working in California.  Southwestern style also incorporated Hispanic elements associated with the early Mission and Spanish architecture, and Native American design.  The result was a blending of the arts and crafts rectilinear forms with traditional Spanish colonial architecture and furnishings.  Mission Style interiors were often embellished with Native American patterns, or actual Southwestern Native American artifacts such as rugs, pottery, and baskets.  The collecting of Southwestern artifacts became very popular in the first quarter of the twentieth century.
  • 56. Arts and Crafts  Arts and Crafts developed in England in the 1860s.  Arts and Crafts focuses on direct, handcrafted creations.  The movement represents in some sense a revolt against the hard mechanical conventional life and it's insensitivity to beauty.  Arts and Crafts designers reacted against these influences of the industrial revolution, insisting on hand techniques rather than assembly lines.  Primarily a decorative arts movement about *how* things are made . Art Nouveau  Art Nouveau arose in the Belle Epoque of the 1890s inParis, Munich (Jugendstil), and Wiener (Sezession).  Art Nouveau fully embraces mass production with brightly colored posters and décortive style.  Art Nouveau is a rejection of the European Academic Style  Art Nouveau artists began to bend metal and glass into strange, new shapes.  An art movement about *what* is made .
  • 57. Arts and crafts  William Morris, naturally, was extremely adamant about staying far from industrialized products.  While Morris’ style was more botanic and decorative.  Morris was customized. Art Nouveau  Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, work were almost completely mass-produced, as he was responsible for creating posters for the Moulin Rouge cabaret.  Lautrec relied on flat, bold colors and strict outlines.  Lautrec was commercial.