, Helensburgh, Argyll and Bute
The British Isles 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. 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. 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. 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. 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." – though Edwards was more inclined to resurrecting Welsh Nationalism than admiring glazes or rustic integrity. In architecture,
Clough Williams-Ellis sought to renew interest in ancient building, reviving "rammed earth" or
pisé 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 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. Other architects practising 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) 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. and
Karin 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. 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. 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 standardised production. However, its leading members, van de Velde and
Hermann Muthesius, had conflicting opinions about standardisation. 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." In Finland, an idealistic artists' colony in
Helsinki was designed by
Herman Gesellius,
Armas Lindgren, and
Eliel Saarinen, 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 and lawn overlooking
Lake Winnipesaukee in
New Hampshire, built 1913–1914 , California 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 publicised 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, New York, and Elbert Hubbard's
Roycroft campus in
East Aurora, New York. 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 recognised. 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. 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 28 June 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 emphasised 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. The
Castle in the Clouds (also known as
Lucknow), a mountaintop estate in the
Ossipee Mountains of
New Hampshire, built in 1913–14 by the Boston architect
J. Williams Beal for
Tom and Olive Plant, is an excellent example of the American Craftsman style in New England., 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. In Canada, artist, teacher and architect
George Agnew Reid (1860–1947) was a major proponent of the Arts and Crafts movement. Reid was interested in linking art and social issues, and he felt strongly that visual and applied arts could act as tools for personal and social improvement through public access to beauty and good design. Reid brought his "art for life's sake" sensibility to his painting practice, specifically with the murals he created in and around Toronto. Reid was also the founding vice-president of the Arts and Crafts Society of Canada (renamed the Canadian Society of Applied Arts) 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. 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 civilisations.
Museums The
Museum of the American Arts and Crafts Movement (MAACM) is located in downtown
St. Petersburg, Florida, and exhibits an extensive collection of fine and decorative arts from the American Arts and Crafts movement (c. 1880-1920).
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. Like the Arts and Crafts movement in Europe, Mingei sought to preserve traditional crafts in the face of modernising industry. ==Architecture==