Showing posts with label liberty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label liberty. Show all posts

Monday, January 16, 2012

The Influence of Persian Decorative Creativity

Illustration: Persian manuscript page.

The influence of Islamic decoration on the decorative arts of Europe has been both fundamental and long-standing. From the early medieval period onwards the influence on European surface pattern in particular, has been an important element both as an inspiration and as a developmental tool. The interaction between southern Europe and North Africa for example, proved to be creatively inspiring, producing an inter-locking cultural mix of Islamic, Classical and Christian motifs and pattern work that was to produce some of the most important developments in textile pattern work.

By the nineteenth century one of the main areas of intrigue and fascination for Europeans involved in the decorative arts was that of Persia, modern day Iran. The history of the decorative arts in Islamic Persia was considered by many Europeans to be of fundamental importance, with highly sophisticated decorative work that could do nothing but be inspirational to designers in Europe. The extension of the Persian culture into Northern India through the Moghul Empire had proved to be particularly inspirational to the British who came into direct contact with the cultural heritage through their assimilation of India. It was this combination of Persian and Northern Indian decorative work that proved to be so inspirational to a number of British designers.

Illustration: Indo-Persian manuscript border designs.

Decorative pattern work in Islam came in many forms and tended to be spread across most of the decorative art disciplines. It was therefore used on an inspirational level within European industries that supplied the growing interiors market. Ceramics and textiles proved to be particular beneficiaries in the latter half of the nineteenth century with both disciplines producing a formidable amount of work, both obvious and subtle, with Britain being particularly susceptible to the style.

Islamic decoration tends to be perceived as following two main themes geometric and floral, and while this is true to a certain extent, there is a complexity to the culture, one that has incorporated a number of different regional and cultural themes, that makes this too simplistic, but sometimes useful when dealing with the larger themes of pattern work. Interestingly, of the two perceived themes, the British in the nineteenth century tended more towards the floral than the geometrical, despite the persistent persuasion of such critics as Owen Jones who saw the fundamental and varied building blocks of the geometrical as a perfect vocabulary for an endless complexity of pattern.   

 Illustration: Persian manuscript page.

All of the illustrations shown in this article are facsimiles of historical Persian manuscripts that were reproduced for a European audience to both marvel at and see as being potentially inspirational. In some respects, they were produced as an historical and cultural evaluation of Persia, but they were also an obvious portfolio of possible decorative techniques for use in contemporary European pattern work. The percentage of active inspiration depended on both the individual designer and the company involved. William Morris for example, was both intrigued and inspired by Persian and Moghul decorative qualities and techniques, but did not actively copy any of the results that he came across in his research. However, his surface pattern work in both printed textiles and carpet design did use some of the general techniques that could be found in Persian floral decoration. It is sometimes not always the direct approach to observational inspiration that is the most useful; often it is the slow and almost sub-conscious result that proves to be the most rewarding. However, others were more aware of the direct allure of what was termed as the 'Orient' and its potential for profits, and therefore a much closer observational inspiration was chosen.

Whichever path proved to be the most profitable, the creative or material, or even a combination of both, Persian and Moghul elements seeped into the decorative format of nineteenth century British decoration. So much so that the imported style can be seen as being an intrinsic part of many of the formats and disciplines that made up the decorative arts, from textiles to ceramics, and from illustration to metalwork. Some of the decorative inspiration is practically and blatantly obvious as in the output of Liberty for example, while some is much less so and forms a foundational level, as in the case of Morris and Co. 

 Illustration: Persian manuscript page.

However, no matter what the level of inspiration, it is fascinating to evaluate the influences and cultural overlaps that are always such a part of the history of decoration. It is intriguing to see the historical possibilities that may have been produced between the creativity of two different cultures in different parts of the world. The creative connections formed by Britain from that of Iran, many of which were not necessarily consciously achieved, show how important this form of cultural fermentation has been in the development of the decorative arts in general and in that of Britain specifically, an island that has always had a natural tendency to absorb decorative formats, embellish even transform them and then redirect them for both domestic and external markets. It is this form of creativity that perhaps lies at the heart of Britain's nineteenth century relationship with both Iran and its Moghul extension in British India.

Further reading links:

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Heal's Furniture and the Arts & Crafts Ideal


Illustration: Heal's advertising literature, 1898.

Ambrose Heal set out with the idea to expand his family's bedding business into the lucrative furnishing and accessory market. He was convinced that simple, well-constructed and functional furniture could be produced at a reasonable retail price for the general public.

This does not, of course mean that he was adverse to selling furniture that was more elaborate and expensive. Ambrose Heal was above all a pragmatist who was well aware that there was more than one type of consumer for interior products and more than one type of retail strategy and he was more than happy to cater for a cross section of tastes and finances.

However, as far as furniture is concerned, it is the simple, well-constructed styles produced at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century that Heal's is now best remembered.

Heal himself was never just a retailer. He had the final say in all aspects of the business, whether it was graphics for advertising, shop layout, or indeed, the construction of the furniture for sale. Obviously this attention to detail paid off, as Heal's, along with Liberty, had one of the earliest corporate identity's in the retail sector.

Interestingly, Heal was a trained cabinetmaker and he in fact designed the 'St Ives' furniture shown in the advertisement of 1898 that illustrates this article. However, he commissioned Charles Robert Ashbee's Guild of Handicraft workshop to produce the furniture initially, but Heal, always being a man who needed direct control over all aspects of design, production and retailing, and with a careful eye on costs, felt that he could achieve cheaper and better results if he were to set up his own workshop. This he did, having first persuaded Ashbee's chief cabinetmaker to run the new Heal's workshop.

Ambrose Heal, through the Heal retail outlet, was able to produce realistic Arts & Crafts inspired interior furnishings and accessories. That he was able to sell furniture, at a relatively cheap price made it all the more attractive and affordable to the masses, something the Arts & Crafts Guilds, although aspiring to, never managed.

This had always been the dream of the Arts & Crafts movement and it is perhaps ironic that a retailer was able to achieve one of the fundamental aspects of the movements philosophy, simple, well-constructed and functional furniture, affordable to the common man. But perhaps what had really been needed amongst the Guilds and the Arts & Crafts movement in general, was the realistic and above all practical and pragmatic imagination of an Ambrose Heal.

Further reading links:
Victorian and Edwardian Furniture and Interiors: From the Gothic Revival to Art Nouveau
The Arts and Crafts Movement in Britain (Shire History)
The Arts & Crafts Movement
Arts and Crafts Movement (World of Art)
Arts and Crafts Furniture: From Classic to Contemporary
Arts and Crafts Furniture
Arts & Crafts Furniture Anyone Can Make
Arts & Crafts Furniture: Projects You Can Build for the Home (Woodworker's Library)
Authentic Arts & Crafts Furniture Projects
Good Citizens Furniture: The Arts and Crafts Collection at Cheltenham 

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Gothic Revival Wallpaper


Illustration: Wallpaper design, 1840s.

This startling Gothic wallpaper design was produced in the 1840s. Today we would find it hard to contemplate living with such a definite design statement on our walls. However, this wallpaper design was produced to make that very statement.

This is a relatively early Gothic Revival design, though not to be confused with the eighteenth century Gothic Revival. Most of the popular inspired wallpapers were about ten years away and so this piece is perhaps more faithful to the original concept of the Victorian Gothic Revival, later designs were softened and the architectural references were relaxed in order to appeal to a larger market.

The design was probably produced for a library, or possibly dining room, two areas of a nineteenth century house that were traditionally considered to be mainly male domains. The statement that the wallpaper was supposed to be making was that the occupier of the house had scholarly leanings and was to be considered to be of a serious, if somewhat traditional intellect. However, as this is such an early wallpaper design in the Gothic style, it should also be seen as to a certain extent cutting edge, if not vaguely revolutionary, in decorative terms at least.


Illustration: Wallpaper design, 1840s.

The Gothic style of decoration was by no means staid and formulaic in the 1840s. It was considered new, bold and daring. The accepted style of the age was still considered to be classically inspired, particularly within interiors. France still set the trends in interior furnishings, but Britain was beginning to flex its newfound economic strength and individuality and wanted an interior style that it could call its own. This inevitably was to be Gothic. A style that was to be a catalyst for more than half a century of British design inspiration that would include within its sphere: William Morris; the Arts & Crafts movement; Liberty; and a whole host of designers that were to inspire and energise individuals and movements around the world.

Further reading links:
The Gothic Revival (World of Art)
Gothic Revival
Gothic Revival A&I (Art and Ideas)
The Origins of the Gothic Revival (Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in Britis)
Victorian and Edwardian Furniture and Interiors: From the Gothic Revival to Art Nouveau
Gothic Revival: An Essay in the History of Taste
In Pointed Style: The Gothic Revival in America, 1800-1860
Gothic Style
Victorian Gothic House Style: An Architectural and Interior Design Source Book
A. W. N. Pugin: Master of Gothic Revival
The Gothic Tradition (Cambridge Contexts in Literature)