The Haslemere Peasant Industries Hanging (1896), in the British Galleries, V &A Museum |
"In the 1860s progressive thinkers began to develop radical new ideas about design but the Arts and Crafts style was not fully recognised or named until the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society was founded in 1888.
"Central to Arts and Crafts thinking was a new appreciation of the artistic skills of the workers and a belief that makers should derive satisfaction from their craftsmanship. Supporters opposed large, impersonal factories and set up small workshops, often in the countryside.
"Arts and Crafts designers valued the natural beauty of materials. They simplified forms and structures. Ornament was designed to enhance construction rather than to mask it and was based on handicraft techniques. Later, commercial manufacturers and retailers adapted the style for production by machine."
The Haslemere Peasant Industries Hanging (1896), in the British Galleries, V &A Museum |
The Haslemere hanging is displayed with:
- a Liberty & Co washstand c.1894, "probably designed by Leonard F. Wyburd"
- an armchair 1892-1902 "designed and possibly made by Ernest W. Gimson"
- a Morton & Co. 'Omar' woven furnishing fabric (on the wall to the right) 1896-1900 "designed by Charles Harrison Townsend"
The Haslemere Peasant Industries Hanging (1896), in the British Galleries, V &A Museum |
The Arts and Crafts stand next to The Haslemere Peasant Industries Hanging (1896), in the British Galleries, V &A Museum |
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