William
Morris was a leading member of the Arts and Crafts Movement.
He is best known for his pattern designs, particularly on
fabrics and wallpapers. His vision in linking art to industry
by applying the values of fine art to the production of commercial
design was a key stage in the evolution of design as we know
it today.
William
Morris was an artist, designer, printer, typographer, bookbinder,
craftsman, poet, writer and champion of socialist ideals.
He believed that a designer should have a working knowledge
of any media that he used and as a result he spent a lot of
time teaching himself a wide variety of techniques. Like many
designers of his time, Morris was skilled in a wide range
of arts and crafts. For example, although he is famous for
his wallpaper designs, he also founded the Kelmscott Press
which published high quality hand bound books and was very
influential in the revival of the private press.
The
Designs of William Morris

William
Morris - 'Windrush'
Pencil and Watercolour sketch for textile design, 1881-83
The
creative approach that William Morris employed in his designs
was revealed in a lecture from 1874: 'first, diligent
study of Nature and secondly, study of the work of the ages
of Art'.
Morris
felt that the 'diligent study of Nature' was important,
as nature was the perfect example of God's design. He saw
this as the spiritual antidote to the decline in social, moral
and artistic standards during the Industrial Revolution.
Likewise
the 'study of the work of the ages of Art', a reference
to the appreciation of art history, was equally important
as Morris encouraged artists to look to the past for their
inspiration believing that the art of his own age was inferior.
Morris' solution was for a return to the values of the Gothic
art of the middle Ages, where artists and craftsmen had worked
together with a common purpose: to glorify God through the
practice of their skills. The model for this solution was
the medieval crafts guilds which he saw as a type of socialist
brotherhood where everybody fulfilled themselves according
to their level of ability. Morris felt that this would enhance
the quality of life for all, and that artistic activity itself
would be seen as a force for good in society.
The
Medieval Crafts Guilds
The
medieval crafts guilds were groups of artists, architects,
and craftsmen who formed an alliance to maintain high standards
of workmanship, regulate trade and competition, and protect
the secrets of their crafts. The guilds were usually composed
of smaller workshops of associated crafts from the same town
who banded together into larger groups for their own protection
and prosperity. They operated on a Master, Journeyman and
Apprentice system where the master would take on apprentices
to train them in the skills of his craft. The apprentices
were 'bound' to work for free for that master for a period
of around five to nine years. In return the master would look
after their welfare and education in the skills of his craft
until they graduated as journeymen. As journeymen, they were
not only paid for their work but also free to go and work
for other masters. In time, if a journeyman demonstrated outstanding
skill in his craft, he could advance in the guild to the position
of master and take on his own apprentices.
Patterns
from Nature

William
Morris - 'Trellis'
Pencil and Watercolour sketch for wallpaper design, 1862
Morris
was one of the great pattern designers. His classic designs
are still commercially available as wallpapers and textiles.
His patterns are inspired by his intimate knowledge of natural
forms discovered through drawing and stylised through his
detailed knowledge of historical styles. They were usually
titled with the names of the flowers that they depicted such
as 'Chrysanthemum', 'Jasmine', 'Acanthus', and 'Sunflower'.
In effect, Morris took the natural forms that he found outside
in the woods and meadows and used them to decorate the inside
of our homes.
His
wallpaper designs were echoed in his textile, tapestry and
carpet designs. Their images are similar, only simplified
due to the limitations of coarser media.

William
Morris - 'Trellis'
Wallpaper Design, 1864
Morris'
design for 'Trellis', his first attempt at a wallpaper design,
was based on roses growing over trellises in the garden at
the Red House, his classic Arts and Crafts Movement home,
at Bexleyheath in Kent. The pattern shows a medieval influence
as it is recalls the ornamental decoration to be found on
illuminated manuscripts and tapestries. The birds and insects
which were later added to the final design were drawn by Philip
Webb, the architect of the Red House. 'Trellis' was one of
Morris' favourite designs and he chose it to decorate his
bedroom at Kelmscott House in London where he spent his final
years.
The
Kelmscott Press
In
1891, Morris founded the Kelmscott Press, named after the
village near Oxford where he had lived since 1871. The Kelmscott
Press produced high quality hand-printed books to be seen
and cherished as objects d'art. Morris designed and cut the
typefaces, ornamental borders and title pages which were based
on the style of medieval manuscripts, while the illustrations
were created by the Pre-Raphaelite artist, Edward Burne-Jones.
The books were printed on handmade paper, copied from 15th
century Italian samples, and bound in vellum.

William
Morris Typefaces
Kelmscott Press, 1897
Although
Morris looked to the past for inspiration, his aims anticipate
modernist ideas on typography and layout: 'I began printing
books with the hope of producing some which would have a definite
claim to beauty, while at the same time they should be easy
to read and should not dazzle the eye......I found I had to
consider chiefly the following things: the paper, the form
of the type, the relative spacing of the letters, the words,
and the lines; and lastly the position of the printed matter
on the page'

William
Morris - 'Nature of Gothic' Title Page
from 'The Stones of Venice' by John Ruskin (Kelmscott Press,
1892)
Altogether
Kelmscott published 53 titles (18,000 copies in all), including 'The Nature of Gothic', a chapter from 'The Stones
of Venice' by the art critic, John Ruskin. Morris, who
wrote the preface praising the book, had been greatly inspired
by Ruskin whose writings influenced the Arts and Crafts movement
by encouraging the revival of Gothic art and architecture.
The
Kelmscott Press was never a financial success as their beautifully
hand-crafted books were too expensive to produce at a profit.
It was an enterprise that Morris ran simply for pleasure.
Kelmscott only ran for seven years and closed in 1898, two
years after the death of Morris. However, the high standard
of their output inspired a revival of the private press across
Europe and America and influenced the development of typography
and graphic design in the early 20th century.
The
Arts and Crafts Movement

The
'dark Satanic mills' of the Industrial Revolution
The
Arts and Crafts Movement (1850-1900) was a reaction against
the Industrial Revolution. The development of the steam engine
by James Watt in 1765
led to the mechanisation of industry, agriculture and transportation
and changed the life of the working man in Britain. The cities
and towns grew to accommodate the expanding industries and
the influx of workers from the countryside looking for employment.
However, living standards gradually deteriorated and industrialisation
left people with a sense that their life had changed for the
worst. Many had sacrificed a rural lifestyle 'in England's
green and pleasant land' for the sake of a job in the
'dark Satanic mills' of the Industrial Revolution.
As a result, they lost that feeling of security and belonging
which comes from living in smaller communities.
The
Ideals of the Arts and Crafts Movement
The
members of the Arts and Crafts Movement included artists,
architects, designers, craftsmen and writers. They feared
that industrialisation was destroying the environment in which
traditional skills and crafts could prosper, as machine production
had taken the pride, skill and design out of the quality of
goods being manufactured. They believed that hand crafted
objects were superior to those made by machine and that the
rural craftsman had a superior lifestyle to those who slaved
in the urban mills and factories. They were convinced that
the general decline of artistic standards brought on by industrialisation
was linked to the nation's social and moral decline.
The
Crafts Guilds
The
Arts and Crafts Movement formed into various crafts guilds
to try to recreate the dignified working environment that
existed in the medieval crafts guilds. They gave themselves
names such as the Century Guild, the Guild of Saint George,
the Art Workers Guild and the Guild of Handicraft.

Hobby Horse (Edition No1, April 1884)
The Journal of The
Century Guild
The
Century Guild was the first of the craft guilds to form. It
was founded in 1882, under the influence of William Morris,
by the architect and designer A.H. Mackmurdo. In 1884 the
guild published a quarterly journal called 'Hobby Horse' to
promote their aims and ideals. In particular, they championed
the craft of printing as an art form which inspired Morris
to found the Kelmscott Press.
Influence
on Art Education

Walter
Crane - Neptune's Horses, 1893
Among
other noteworthy guilds was the prestigious Art Workers Guild,
whose membership included lecturers and principles from the
leading art schools. Walter Crane, the principal of the Royal
College of Art in 1897-8 and a renowned illustrator of children's
books, was a founding member. The architect and theorist,
W. R. Lethaby, the first Professor of Design at the RCA, became
the original director and co-founder of the London Central
School of Arts and Crafts, the first college to introduce
craft workshops to promote Arts and Crafts principles within
mainstream art education. This integration of design with
art education is one of the great legacies of the Arts and
Crafts Movement.
The
Decline of the Arts and Crafts Movement
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 mechanisation, 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,
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.

Christopher
Dresser (teapot, 1879)
Wikimedia
Commons
Some
designers, such as Christopher Dresser (1834-1904) 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.
William
Morris Notes

- Morris
is mostly known as a designer of patterns for wallpaper
and textiles.
- Morris
was also an artist, designer, printer, typographer, bookbinder,
craftsman, poet, writer and champion of socialist ideals.
- Morris
believed that the art and design of his own time was inferior
and unworthy. He felt that this was due to the poor quality
of life during the Industrial Revolution.
- Morris
believed that nature was the perfect example of God's
design.
- Morris
believed that all design should be based on nature which
he saw as the spiritual remedy to the inferior standards
of art and design during the Industrial Revolution.
- Morris
said, "Have nothing in your house that you do not
know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful."
- Morris
encouraged artists and designers to look back to medieval
art for their inspiration as this was a time when artists
and craftsmen worked together with equal status.
- Morris
founded the Kelmscott Press to create beautiful handmade
books which would elevate the craft of printing to an
art form.
Arts
and Crafts Movement Notes
- 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 that
the growth of industry had destroyed traditional skills
and had removed the pride that a craftsman could find
in his work.
- The
members of the Arts and Crafts Movement formed themselves
into crafts guilds, based on the medieval examples, in
order to encourage high standards of design and provide
a supportive working environment.
- The
crafts guilds gave themselves names such as the Century
Guild, the Guild of Saint George, the Art Workers Guild
and the Guild of Handicraft.
- The
Arts and Crafts Movement raised the status of design in
art education and established it as an essential element
in the manufacturing process.