"The Arts and Crafts Movement was one of the most influential,
profound and far-reaching design movements of modern times. It began in
Britain around 1880 and quickly spread across America and Europe before
emerging finally as the Mingei (Folk Crafts) movement in Japan.
It
was a movement born of ideals. It grew out of a concern for the effects
of industrialisation: on design, on traditional skills and on the lives
of ordinary people. In response, it established a new set of principles
for living and working. It advocated the reform of art at every level
and across a broad social spectrum, and it turned the home into a work
of art.
The Movement took its name from the Arts and Crafts
Exhibition Society, founded in 1887, but it encompassed a very wide
range of like-minded societies, workshops and manufacturers. Other
countries adapted Arts and Crafts philosophies according to their own
needs. While the work may be visually very different, it is united by
the ideals that lie behind it.
This was a movement unlike any that
had gone before. Its pioneering spirit of reform, and the value it
placed on the quality of materials and design, as well as life, shaped
the world we live in today.
In Britain the disastrous effects of industrial manufacture and
unregulated trade had been recognised since about 1840, but it was not
until the 1860s and 1870s that architects, designers and artists began
to pioneer new approaches to design and the decorative arts. These, in
turn, led to the foundation of the Arts and Crafts Movement.
The
two most influential figures were the theorist and critic John Ruskin
and the designer, writer and activist William Morris. Ruskin examined
the relationship between art, society and labour. Morris put Ruskin's
philosophies into practice, placing great value on work, the joy of
craftsmanship and the natural beauty of materials.
By the 1880s
Morris had become an internationally renowned and commercially
successful designer and manufacturer. New guilds and societies began to
take up his ideas, presenting for the first time a unified approach
among architects, painters, sculptors and designers. In doing so, they
brought Arts and Crafts ideals to a wider public." http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/t/the-arts-and-crafts-movement/
Influences;
- industrial manufacture
How to spot it;
- rough, simple
Related artists;
- William Morris
Hey, my name's Kim and I'm currently studying Art & Design at North Notts College, in my second year. I love art but textiles is my real passion; I've applied for Bespoke Tailoring at London College of Fashion and have an interview on 26th Feb which i'm really excited and nervous about! This blog is full of my college work so feel free to browse through... (:
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