Chapter 10: The Arts and Crafts Movement. (1880 to 1910) and its Heritage

Similar documents
2/16/16. Art and Crafts Movement. Art and Crafts Movement. Art and Crafts Movement

Art and Crafts Movement. } Writer/artist/philosopher John Ruskin ( ) Art and Crafts Movement ( )

Pickering s edition of the Elements of Euclid is a landmark of book design.

From Splendor to Simplicity: Explaining the Aesthetic and Ideological Diversity of the Arts & Crafts Movement,

Book Cover Redesign Proposal

Chapter 7: Renaissance Graphic Design

import/export 05/30/10 Modular Systems

VISUAL VOCABULARY LECTURE 2 TYPOGRAPHY II COUNTY COLLEGE OF MORRIS PROFESSOR GAYLE REMBOLD FURBERT

Frederic Goudy Collection

The first significant revision to the Gutenberg Printing press was?! A. Lithography! B. Stanhope Cast Iron Press! C. Koeing Steam Powered Press! D.

The Age of Self. Place, People, and Process Mud/sun-dried bricks Michaelangelo Da Vinci Bernini

CHINO VALLEY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE ART HISTORY

Chapter 4: Illuminated Manuscripts

The Greatest Invention in the World. Marshall High School Mr. Cline Western Civilization II Unit TWO JA

HOME RENAISSANCE FOUNDATION WORKING PAPERS. Number 45 THE INFLUENCE OF DESING AT HOME: FROM ELEGANCE TO EFFICIENCY. By Raquel Cascales

PART TWO Chapters 5 8 HISTORY OF GRAPHIC & WEB DESIGN

Reviews. SADLY, THE DEATH of Nick Salmon in 2002 deprived William

The Dwindling Language of Type Specimens

The Importance of Being Earnest Art & Self-Indulgence Unit. Background Information

REMINDER! Please bring your alarm-clock or whatever you use as your alarm clock to the next meeting!

He made things, well-limned and beauteous and sold them in his shop. He had a genius for design and form a high metabolism and hundreds of projects

Creator Gutenberg, Johann Creator/Era Dates Creator Nation Germany Creator Role Painter Title Gothic Type Style/Period

c. Tyoeface of early northern Europe printing was Gothic blackletter; not acceptable to humanist southern Europe. d. Chancery script e.

The I(elmscott Press: An Album from the Nineties

Web design; Book design; Typography; User interface; Representation of digital texts; History of printing; History of typography

OUR VISION WHERE WE RE GOING

Renaissance Old Masters and Modernist Art History-Writing

Comparison of Similarities and Differences between Two Forums of Art and Literature. Kaili Wang1, 2

Virginia English 12, Semester A

Chapter 6 The German Illustrated Book

3-Which one it not true about Morality plays and Mystery plays of the Medieval period?

COURSE OUTLINE Humanities: Ancient to Medieval

The Romantic Age: historical background

Chaucer-overview English 2322: British Literature: Anglo-Saxon Mid 18th Century D. Glen Smith, instructor

Name of Student September 18, 2006 Art 461 Dr. DiMarco

NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE GRADE 12

Contents 1. Chaucer To Shakespeare 3 92

MACMILLAN MASTER GUIDES THE PROLOGUE TO THE CANTERBURY TALES BY GEOFFREY CHAUCER

English Poetry. Page 1 of 7

Medieval Art. artwork during such time. The ivory sculpting and carving have been very famous because of the

Village Seven Presbyterian Church Graphic Standards Manual VillageSeven

The JOURNAL OF THE RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LIBRARY TYPE DESIGN

Books. The Power of Print

History and Bibliography of the Roycroft Printing Shop: Papers of Paul McKenna, circa 1899, , undated

A New Reflection on the Innovative Content of Marxist Theory Based on the Background of Political Reform Juanhui Wei

The Supreme Encounter Between Art Jewellery And Love For Animals: The Most Precious Cat Bed In The World Is Born

Chapter 10. Books and the Power of Print

The Adrian Rogers Legacy Bible - Brown Leather Bound New King James Version. Click here if your download doesn"t start automatically

History Of Manuscript Illumination

NEW MAILER FOR JANUARY BUNDLE!

A GUIDE TO: ART COLLECTIONS

Design Concept. Harmony Transparency Syntax Fluid Technique

Brand Guidelines. January 2015

The Legacy of Ancient Roman Civilization

Helvetica And The New York City Subway System: The True (Maybe) Story (MIT Press) PDF

LTA3. ENGLISH LITERATURE (SPECIFICATION A) Unit 3 Texts in Context. General Certificate of Education June 2004 Advanced Subsidiary Examination

Chapter 10: Books and the Power of Print

Ben Franklin, Writer and Publisher

The International Typographic Style, also known as the Swiss Style,

To gather rare books and manuscripts, such as would be of the greatest educational, historical and literary interest and use.

Geoffrey Little Office hours by appointment OVERVIEW

What Publishers Really Do for the Academic World

Clip Art CD-ROM & Book Sets

Document 1: Two woodblock images How is the method of producing books different based on the two images?

Romanticism and Transcendentalism

PARAGRAPHS ON DECEPTUAL ART by Joe Scanlan

HISTORY of the BOOK. Chapter 9. Industrialization of Print. Automation, mass production, changes in literacy, and aesthetic responses

Helena Public Schools. Fine Arts Curriculum. Visual Arts

Excursion Guide. Poland

The Dodge Brand. Key Visual Elements and Usage Guidelines

ISTINYE UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE and LITERATURE COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

The Emery Walker' photographs at St Bride's

University Graphic Identity Guidelines

Romanticism & the American Renaissance

Melbert B. Cary Jr. Graphic Arts Collection Rochester Institute of Technology Libraries CSC 039 JOSPEH BLUMENTHAL PAPERS linear feet, 8 boxes

Comparative Study Self Assessment Criteria & Strategies

Graphic Identity Manual MARKETING DEPARTMENT

Holy Roman Empire. ! An eastern Empire, based on Constantinople (now Ιstanbul), continued for far longer. Holy Roman Empire

CERTIFICATION MARK STANDARDS GUIDE

There is an activity based around book production available for children on the Gothic for England website which you may find useful.

Writing Essays. Ex.: Analyze the major social and technological changes that took place in European warfare between 1789 and 1871.

Letter Art. Clare Youngs. Click here if your download doesn"t start automatically

Affinity and the Tree of Spiritual Cognition by Johannes Andreae. Its format consists of 7

Book of visual identification

BRAND GUIDELINES. July version 2.1

Fulton County Typographical Union, No. 268; Records apap018

THE RANKINGS The World s Top 225 Music Products Companies Ranked By Revenue

amorphous facile proffer sanguine ascetic doggerel guile protégé seraphic decorum

The Book of Ruth. La Salle University Digital Commons. La Salle University. La Salle University Art Museum. Spring 2001

INTRODUCTION AND PURPOSE

U N I T 2 : T H E M I D D L E A G E S E N G 1 2 A

Oscar Wilde ( )

Romanticism And Children's Literature In Nineteenth-Century England

Analysis of the Instrumental Function of Beauty in Wang Zhaowen s Beauty- Goodness-Relationship Theory

Champions of Invention. by John Hudson Tiner

Relationship of Marxism in China and Chinese Traditional Culture Lixin Chen

Out of Italy. New in the Renaissance (Springboard handout) Living Legend (2 page handout) What s the Difference? (handout)

Intro to Graphic Arts Project. Art 1 Meg McDyre

Hegel and the French Revolution

Power: Interpersonal, Organizational, and Global Dimensions Monday, 31 October 2005

Transcription:

Chapter 10: The Arts and Crafts Movement (1880 to 1910) and its Heritage

The Industrial Revolution wasn t all sunshine and rainbows.

Many mass produced products were cheaply made and poorly designed.

The anything goes design philosophy often resulted in graphic design that resembled a 19 th century version of do-it-yourself Myspace design.

Arts and Craft movement The Arts and Crafts movement flourished in England during the last decades of the 19th Century as a reaction against the social, moral, and artistic confusion of the Industrial Revolution. Design and a return to handicraft were advocated, the cheap and nasty mass-produced goods were despised. The leader of the Arts and Crafts movement, William Morris (1834 96), called for a fitness of purpose, truth to the nature of materials and methods of productions, and individual expression by both designer and worker. The writer and artist John Ruskin (1819 1900) inspired the philosophy of this movement. Asking how society could consciously order the lives of its members so as to maintain the largest number of noble and happy human beings, Ruskin rejected the mercantile economy and pointed toward the union of art and labor in service to society, as exemplified in the design and construction of the medieval Gothic cathedral.

John Ruskin 1819-1900 Writer and artist The union of art and labor, in service to society, would create the largest number of happy human beings. The Arts and Crafts movement was inspired by the philosophy of writer and artist John Ruskin. He felt that industrialization and technology caused a greater separation of art and society, and that separation should be eliminated.

William Morris 1834-1896 The leading champion of the Arts and Crafts movement was the designer, painter, poet and social reformer William Morris. He rejected to opulence on the Victorian era and urged a return to medieval traditions of design, craftsmanship, and community. Founder of Morris & Company The Kelmscott Press Morris developed the view that art should be both beautiful and functional.

William Morris 1834-1896 William Morris was a pivotal figure in the Arts and Crafts movement. His deep concern about the problems of industrialization and the factory system led him to implement Ruskin s ideas and address the tastelessness of massproduced goods and the lack of honest craftsmanship, through a reunion of art and craft.

William Morris, Rose fabric design, 1883.

Red House William Morris had the Red House designed for him and his wife, by the architect Philip Webb. The house was notable for it s L-shaped design, instead of being a rectangular box. During the decorating of the house, Morris discovered the appalling state of Victorian product and furniture design.

Red House This led Morris to design and supervise the production of furniture, stained glass and tapestries for his house. As a result of this experience, he established the art decorating firm Morris, Marshall, Faulkner and Company, which later became Morris and Company.

William Morris, trademark for the Kelmscott Press, 1892.

William Morris, trademark for the Kelmscott Press, 1892 It was one of William Morris final attempts to preserve the old relationships between the artist and his art and his society. William Morris, trademark for the Kelmscott Press, 1892. The books issued by the Kelmscott Press were expensive Morris designed his own typefaces, made his own paper, and printed by hand but they were beautiful. They were designed to be read slowly, to be appreciated, to be treasured, and thus made an implicit statement about the ideal relationships which ought to exist between the reader, the text, and the author

William Morris, trademark for the Kelmscott Press, 1892 Kelmscott Press: Sense of design unity with smallest detail relating to the total concept inspired a whole generation of book designers well into the twentieth century and filtered into commercial printing. Morris reexamination of earlier typefaces and graphic design history touched off a redesign process that resulted in major improvements in the quality and variety of fonts available for designing and printing. The long-range effect of William Morris body of work was a significant upgrade in book design throughout the world.

The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, 1896 Eighty-seven woodcut illustrations from drawing by edward burnejones Fourteen large borders and eighteen small frames designed by William Morris William Morris, title page spread from The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, 1896. The chaucer typeface, developed specifically for the book by William Morris

The Kelmscott Press Morris founded a private press called Kelmscott Press, where the book became an art form whose elements were unified by a strong sense of design. As a book designer, Morris was greatly influence by medieval books. A private press is operated as an artistic or craft-based endeavor, rather than as a purely commercial venture.

Charles R. Ashbee, the Essex House Press emblem, c. 1902

Essex House Press was founded in 1890 by Charles R. Ashbee (1863 1942), an architect, graphic designer, jeweler, and silversmith. Essex House Press was named after its original location and desolate sec2on of industrial London. Later, the guild moved to a rural village and began the ambitious task of turning the village into a communal society for guild workers and their families. In 1888, Charles R. Ashbee, had founded the Guild of Handicraft inspired by socialism and the Arts and Crafts movement. The emblem for the Essex House Press was a woodcut, and metaphorically related the Guild of Handicraft with a bee seeking a flower.

Early 1800 s Book Design William Pickering (1796-1854) was a London bookseller and publisher. His Diamond Classics series, which includes the book shown here, featured works by such authors as Shakespeare, Virgil, and Dante printed in 4½ point type. Pickering advertised this series as "the smallest edition of the Classics ever published." PubliusTerentius Afer, London: William Pickering, 1822 3 ¾" x 3"

The Elements of Euclid, 1847 Pickering controlled the book format design, type selection, illustrations and all other visual considerations. Working closely with the printer, he supervised the printing of the books. By working in this manner, Pickering played an important role in separating graphic design from printing production. William Pickering, title page from The Elements of Euclid, 1847. A system of color coding brought clarity to the teaching of geometry.

William Pickering William Pickering, pages from The Elements of Euclid, 1847. Although the ornate initial letters connected this book to the past, its revolutionary layout was far ahead of its time. William Pickering s 1847 edition of Oliver Byrne s The Elements of Euclid, a geometry text, marked a break from tradition because color was used to identify the lines and shapes in the diagrams.

Arts & Crafts Movement Legacy Cabinet design for Morris and Company, 1861. The cabinet illustrates the honeymoon of the fifteenth-century Italian king René of Anjou, grace this cabinet. The structure and ornamental carving allude to design from the medieval era.

Arts & Crafts Movement Legacy Although it eventually gave way to Art Nouveau during the early part of the 20 th Century, the most lasting effect of the Arts and Crafts movement is the commitment to design and quality. The movement resisted the fast, cheap and low quality products that became common during the Industrial Revolution. Good designers and printers today obsess over details, while striving to create the highest quality product.

Arthur MacKmurdo Book cover of Arthur Mackmaurdo,Wren's City Churches Arthur Mackmurdo sought inspiration from Renaissance and Japanese art for his designs. Some swirling organic forms, in fact, seem to be pure art nouveau because of these influences.

Guilds During this period a number of Guilds emerged, whose members sought to establish democratic artistic communities united for the common good. Among the most important was the Century Guild. The Century Guild Hobby Horse, featured the work of guild members and was the first magazine devoted to the visual arts.

Guilds The Century Guild Hobby Horse: Featured the work of guild members. The first finely printed magazine devoted exclusively to the visual arts. Selwyn Image, title page to the Century Guild Hobby Horse, 1884. Packing it with detail, Image designed a page within a page that reflects the medieval preoccupation of the Arts and Crafts movement.

Figure 10-6

Figure 10-7

Figure 10-8

Figure 10-9

Figure 10-11

Figure 10-12

Figure 10-13

Figure 10-14

Figure 10-15

Rise of the Private Press The private press movement, which included Kelmscott, Doves, and Essex House Presses, was most concerned with regaining high standards of design, materials, and workmanship.

Figure 10-18

William Morris, pages 18 and 19 from The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, 1896. Beautiful pages of texture and tone contain an order and clarity that make the author s words legible and accessible.

Figure 10-21

Figure 10-22

Figure 10-23

William Addison Dwiggins William Addison Dwiggins (1880 1956) became a book designer who established a house style for the Alfred A. Knopf publishing company and designed hundreds of volumes for the firm. During the early 1920s, Dwiggins first used the term graphic designer to describe his professional activity. Dwiggins designed Caledonia, one of the most widely used typefaces in America.

Figure 10-25

Figure 10-26

Figure 10-27

Figure 10-28 The Roycroft Press in East Aurora, New York was established by Elbert Hubbard. The Roycrofters produced artistic home furnishings, copperware, leather goods, and printing. Hubbard was criticized for imitating the work of William Morris and tarnishing the whole movement. Nonetheless he brought beauty into the lives of ordinary people in a reaction against the mediocre products of industrial ism.

Figure 10-29

Figure 10-30

Figure 10-31

Figure 10-32

Figure 10-33

Figure 10-34

Figure 10-35

Figure 10-36

Figure 10-37

Figure 10-38

Rudolf Koch Rudolf Koch, who designed the Neuland typeface and he regarded the alphabet as a supreme spiritual achievement of humanity. A dense texture is achieved in this intuitively designed typeface with unprecedented capital C and S forms. The woodcut-inspired ornaments are used to justify this setting into a crisp rectangle. Rudolf Koch, specimen of Neuland, 1922 23.

Frederic W. Goudy Fonts designed by Frederic Goudy capture the feeling of French and Venetian Renaissance typography. Goudy became interested in art, literature, and typography on a higher plane than mere commercialism. Goudy had a long association with Lanston Monotype Company which commissioned some of his finest typefaces. He designed 122 typefaces.

American Type Founders Company American Type Founders Company established an extensive typographic research library and played an important role in reviving past designs. Pages from American Type Founders Specimen Book and Catalogue 1923 display printing demonstrations of its Garamond revival with Cleland ornaments.

American Type Founders Company This company established a typographic research library and produced revivals of past typeface designs such as Bodoni and Garamond. Page 45 from American Type Founders Specimen Book and Catalogue 1923, presented the Goudy series of Old Style fonts, including fonts designed by others

Morris Benton Morris F. Benton, (1872 1948), head of typeface development at the American Type Founders, designed important revivals of Bodoni and Garamond. Benton designed approximately 225 typefaces, including Century Schoolbook, which he designed after carefully studying human perception and reading comprehension. Century Schoolbook was designed for and widely used in textbooks.

Bruce Rogers Bruce Rogers designed Centaur, one of the finest of the numerous fonts inspired by Jenson. It was first used in The Centaur by Maurice de Guerin. Rogers said the ultimate test, in considering the employment or the rejection of an element of design or decoration, would seem to be: does it look as if it were inevitable, or would the page look as well or better for its omission?

Figure 10-43

Figure 10-44

Figure 10-45

Summary The legacy of the Arts and Crafts movement extends beyond visual appearances. Its attitudes about materials, function, and social value became an important inspiration for twentieth-century designers. Its positive impact on graphic design continues a century after William Morris s death through the revivals of earlier typefaces designs, the continued efforts toward excellence in book design and typography, and the private press movement that continues to this day.