Showing posts with label flat pattern. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flat pattern. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2012

The Victorian Observation of Indian Decoration

Illustration: Decoration from an Indian lacquer workbox, seen at the Great Exhibition, 1851.

British designers, and particularly those involved in the textile industry, had been either literally copying or producing Anglicised versions of Indian pattern work for generations. Although it was relatively standard practice to produce Indian inspired textile pattern work, it was perhaps not until the nineteenth century that the British began to develop an interest in the reasoning behind, both the popularity and the obvious superiority of Indian decorative pattern.

As the discipline of science procured for itself a veneer of respectability and, to a certain extent at least, a relatively unbiased analysis of a whole range of subjects, the world of the decorative arts, particularly from an historical perspective, was bound to eventually become included in nineteenth century scientific analysis.

A number of individuals tried to make sense of an often bewildering entanglement of decorative pathways. These pathways joined most, if not all of human cultural diversity, into a confusing network of symbols, styles and creative eras. Much of the early nineteenth century information tended to rely on a typically Eurocentric approach to decoration, with most of the decorative eras of Europe either spontaneously appearing fully grown, or lending themselves to cultures outside of the continent. Therefore, European architecture, design and decoration often found itself being put forward as the influencer of what was deemed to be lesser cultures on the periphery of Europe. The fact that often the opposite was true, took some time to percolate within the European consciousness, and to be honest there are still many in Europe who believe in the Eurocentric perspective of events, whether historical, political, religious, or indeed decorative.

Illustration: Indian ivory inlay decoration, seen at the Great Exhibition, 1851.

That Europe and particularly Britain had much to learn from the perspective of design and decoration began to be consistently put forward by a number of critics, some of whom had practical experience in the decorative arts and some who didn't. Criticism of contemporary British decorative arts output gained pace during the 1840s, but it was perhaps the event of the 1851 Great Exhibition in London which really made a convenient public forum in which to discuss British decorative arts as compared to the rest of Europe. However, considering the international aspect of the Exhibition, more particularly to those cultures outside of Europe, many of which were considered little more than colonial appendages of Britain, the discussion and analysis could be expanded beyond Europe.

India was particularly highlighted by critics during and after the Exhibition. For many it was the first time that they had seen Indian products in such detail and on such a scale. Of course, when talking of 'India' we have to be aware that as far as the British were concerned when they referred to India, they were talking of their influence over what is now Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. This also meant that decorative work displayed would be both Hindu and Muslim based and in that respect a cultural range of Indian work would have been seen. However, it is also true that much of the accumulated work shown at the Exhibition under the banner of India had been supplied by the British East India Company as well as by individuals and therefore as the old Mughal Empire was their particular power base much of the decorative display work had a Mughal and therefore Muslim heritage.

Illustration: Decoration from an Indian lacquer workbox, seen at the Great Exhibition, 1851.

Britain had always had, and to some extent still does have, a fairly peculiar relationship with India. Although there is a certain amount of complexity in the relationship which spans a number of generations, there is something to be said for the idea that Britain in its struggle to deal with its own inferiority when seen against the seemingly unchanging and age-old Hindu cultural traditions, or the rich cultural world of the Islamic Mughal Court, found a way of coping with its own inferiority by adopting a form of projected superiority. Many in the Mughal Court in particular saw much of the British blunt acts of perceived superiority as regrettable and painful to watch, and there are lots of amusing stories of Mughal Emperors inviting the British to their Court hoping that the civilised nature of the atmosphere might well help to educate the British in refining their nature.

As to decoration, the analysis of individuals such as Owen Jones helped to formulate, not so much why Indian decorative work was so successful and popular, although this was an important part of the understanding of India and its decorative history, but more a case of why it was consistently of such a high standard and why it seemed to work on so many levels and in so many disciplines without fail. The practical and technical analysis of Indian decoration shows clearly that much of it consists of pattern work that is devoid of illusion. This means in fact that Indian decorative detailing whether for architecture, glass, ceramics, wood, metal or indeed textiles lacks shadow or any element of depth. This was shown to be diametrically opposite to much of European decorative work of the last three or four hundred years.

Illustration: Inlay decoration of an Indian hookah, seen at the Great Exhibition, 1851.

Richard Redgrave in his supplementary report to the Great Exhibition, produced in the following year 1852 stated that Indian:

'...ornament is always flat and without shadow; natural flowers are never used imitatively, or perspectively, but are conventionalised by being displayed flat and according to a symmetrical arrangement; and all other objects, even animals and birds, when used as ornament, are reduced to their simplest flat form.'

Redgrave was not merely casually observing the main aspects that made up Indian decorative pattern work, he was in fact trying to underline why he and others felt that this form of decoration was infinitely superior to anything produced by Europe in the last four hundred years and certainly that of contemporary Britain. It was felt that Indian designers and decorators, rather than suffering from a lack of knowledge of perspective or a three-dimensional viewpoint in art, had instead a superior knowledge and skills base as far as art and design were concerned, specifically because they did not use perspective and illusion. They had an intrinsic and long-term understanding of materials and surfaces, which included their decorative strengths and weaknesses, a technical and practical ability that Britain had lost sometime in the early renaissance. That it was needed for the British to rediscover this innate ability through the Indian decorative arts, was seen as paramount to a successful domination of decoration both in Europe and internationally.

Illustration: Indian cashmere covering, seen at the Great Exhibition, 1851.

Not all were convinced that Indian decoration could help point the way for contemporary British design, and certainly many had difficulty with the concept of Indian decorative arts being seen as superior to that of the British. Many of the British who resided in India itself were prone to see anything Indian as inferior to the British way of life, but as already stated there is always the potential to start believing in your own superiority when it is stressed enough times. That that superiority was inherently self-delusional, and a delusion that was purposely projected as an overall confidence on to those who were being ruled, is an aspect of the British Empire that is only now beginning to surface.

More damning perhaps is the attitude of critics such as Ruskin who was very vocal in his condemnation of non-European art, design and decoration. He was known to have dismissed the Indian decorative arts on a number of occasions which is interesting as many of the followers of Ruskin and particularly those who became part of the British Arts and Crafts movement, were keen to introduce some of the more fundamental aspects of Indian decoration, particularly the aspect of the removal of any form of shadow or depth to pattern work. Although William Morris rarely praised the role that India played within contemporary nineteenth century decoration, particularly within textiles, it is clear that his work follows closely the tenets of Indian decoration. Although he would rather have given the praise to European medievalism, as indeed would Ruskin and many of the Arts and Crafts followers, there is little doubt that India had a long and consistent effect on British decoration. This became acute during the Great Exhibition of 1851 and thereafter was analysed and projected onto at least a certain element of Britain's decorative work, particularly in the form of textiles. Perhaps the British debt to Pakistan, India and Bangladesh, at least in the form of decoration and pattern, should be expressed a little more often than it is.

Further reading links:

Monday, August 8, 2011

Vestment Decoration by A W N Pugin

Illustration: A. W. N. Pugin. Cross pattern design for a frontal of vestment, 1844.

In 1844, the English architect and designer Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin published a Glossary of Ecclesiastical Ornament and Costume, Compiled from Ancient Authorities and Examples. Although superficially a text based A to Z of accessories both in costume and furnishings for Catholic Church services, it was in fact much more fundamental in its remit. Rather than the A to Z aspect which started with Acolythe and ended in White, it was the seventy-three full colour illustrated plates at the back of the book that really caught both the eye and the imagination when first published in 1844.

Pugin, although often classed as an architect rather than as a decorative designer, understood pattern design instinctively. Many of his contemporaries saw him as an ideal and natural designer and recognised a real strength in his surface pattern work that was not always present in his architectural career. Although many see his later interior work for the Palace of Westminster as his crowning achievement, it can often appear, at least by our own contemporary standards, as somewhat overblown, intensely fussy and symbolically tiring, with an overemphasis of Tudor English themes that borders on the obsessive.

Illustration: A.W. N. Pugin. Various pattern designs for apparels of albes, 1844.

However, his decorative work outside of the political arena, although much of it was ecclesiastically based, gives a clear indication as to the natural skills of the decorative artist. The five illustrations for this article, which all come from the 1844 book, give a good indication of the strong colour palette and detailed but strident pattern work that was so much a part of Pugin's natural style and character as both a designer and as a creative individual. Much of the pattern work is well balanced and skilfully executed, although due to the large amounts of thick gold border work, some of pieces will seem more reminiscent to us of Christmas wrapping paper than anything else. However, this forms our own contemporary perspective and should therefore not interfere with an appreciation of the structure of the pattern work itself, no matter how tempting.

Interestingly, all of the work produced throughout the book follows the same fundamental ideal as the five pieces shown here. This regards surface pattern, its function and appearance, and the tenets of the Design Reform movement being put forward during the 1840s and 1850s by such contemporaries as Owen Jones, Richard Redgrave, Christopher Dresser and others.

Illustration: A. W. N. Pugin. Various pattern designs for apparels of albes, 1844.

Pugin, although not a member of the Design Reform movement itself, independently came to similar conclusions regarding the natural parameters that should be set for all forms of surface pattern construction. He was adamant that surface pattern by its very nature should reflect the material it was meant to decorate. Therefore, textiles and wallpapers being flat surfaces should be decorated by flat pattern work. This would naturally exclude all forms of three-dimensional trickery, including the use of shadows to create illusions.

Although at first the main tenet of Pugin's surface pattern ideas, along with that of the Design Reform movement, seems somewhat excessive and harshly critical of many other forms of surface pattern work, it does actually make common and practical sense when working with surface pattern. Many of the more memorable textile and wallpaper designs of the last century and a half have tended to follow this largely unwritten proviso, with outstanding work being produced by designers from William Morris to Lucienne Day.

Illustration: A.W. N. Pugin. Various pattern designs for apparels of albes, 1844.

Much contemporary surface pattern work still follows this ideal though in a relatively wide spectrum of variations from strict geometrical to implied dimension. However, as with life in general there has always been more than enough room in the decorative arts, particularly as far as pattern work is concerned, for more than one option of decorating a flat surface.

It is perhaps important to remember that before the likes of such creatively innovative decorative designers as Pugin, the inspirational parameters as well as that of the creative, was very limited. Most British designers tended on the whole to be inhouse employees, often with little if any professional design experience, and very often with little inspirational materials to hand. With at first no copyright laws and then for many years ones that remained difficult to enforce particularly internationally, pattern work was usually copied from contemporary rivals, or was endlessly redrawn from old pattern books with negligent amounts of significant innovation or creative license.

Illustration: A.W. N. Pugin. Various pattern designs for stoles and maniples, 1844.

This creatively barren loop of almost incestuous pattern work that constantly fed itself endlessly on its own product was in dire need of reform and reappraisal. Many criticised both the British textile and wallpaper industries as being more concerned with increased industrialisation, rather than that of creativity. In other words, critics wanted to see the industrial process with a creative dimension.

Although this was a long time in coming and it could be said that in many respects Britain never fully tackled the issue of creativity and mass production anywhere near as successfully as Germany did for example, the country did produce in the mid-nineteenth century many of the initial ideas and formulas for successful and creative surface pattern design that still guide our own contemporary industries today.

Further reading links:
God's Architect: Pugin and the Building of Romantic Britain
Pugin: A Gothic Passion
Pugin's Gothic Ornament: The Classic Sourcebook of Decorative Motifs with 100 Plates (Dover Pictorial Archives)
Contrasts: Or, a Parallel Between the Noble Edifices of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries and Similar Buildings of the Present Day Shewing the Present ... of Taste Accompanied by Appropriate Text.
A. W. N. Pugin: Master of Gothic Revival
The Stained Glass of A.W.N. Pugin
Pugin's Floral Ornament CD-ROM and Book (Dover Full-Color Electronic Design)
Pugin's Ecclesiastical Ornament (Dover Pictorial Archives)
Augustus Welby Pugin, Designer of the British Houses of Parliament: The Victorian Quest for a Liturgical Architecture
Nineteenth-Century Design: From Pugin to Mackintosh
True Principles of Pointed or Christian Architecture
Patterns: New Surface Design
Surface Pattern Design: A Handbook of How to Create Decorative and Repeat Patterns for Designers and Students
The Pattern Sourcebook: A Century of Surface Design
Surface Design for Fabric
Surface Design for Ceramics (A Lark Ceramics Book)
The Printed Pattern: Techniques and Projects for Inspired Printmaking and Surface Design
Design Your Own Repeat Patterns: A Quick and Easy Approach