arts and crafts movement, red house

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    The Arts and Crafts Movement revived traditional artistic craftsmanship with themes of simplicity, honesty,

    function, harmony, nature and social reform. The movement promoted moral and social health through

    quality of architecture and design executed by skilled creative workers, and was a revolt against the poor

    quality of industrialized mass production.

    The Arts and Crafts Movement in England

    William Morris, often called the father of the English Arts and Crafts Movement, was a Ruskin admirer, a

    socialist and an artist skilled at a variety of crafts. He took Arts and Crafts style ideals to a more general level,

    calling for social and economic reform through an integration of labor and art in society that would bring

    beauty as well as affordability to everyday objects and advance virtues such as simplicity, utility, honesty and

    nature.

    Morris' belief that architecture and decorative arts should be simple, functional, constructed of localmaterials, and, above all, beautiful is summed up best in his own words:

    "Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful."  

    By the late 19th century the Arts and Crafts ideas and convictions of William Morris were carrying to and

    blooming in America.

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    Arts and Crafts architecture was, like the movement itself, defined more by a set of ideals and principles than a

    particular architectural style.

    Many of its leading figures were architects, rather than designers, and they came to view buildings and their

    interiors as a whole. They worked in a variety of media, often with other artists, and hoped to bring a greater unity

    to the arts. As a result, Arts and Crafts buildings often included sculpture and carved or tiled decoration,

    sometimes with highly symbolic imagery.

    Another defining feature of Arts and Crafts architecture was an interest in the vernacular. Architects used local

    materials and traditional styles to create something that would not jar with its surroundings, but at the same time

    distinctive and modern. Many hoped to revive traditional building and craft skills, or to design buildings thatlooked as if they had grown over many years.

    While the majority of Arts and Crafts buildings were domestic, the architects of the movement also addressed the

    various needs of churches, museums and commercial buildings.

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    Ideals from the Arts and Crafts Movement

    The ideals of the Arts and Crafts Movement are aesthetically expressed, in the past and present, in beautifully

    handcrafted household objects, useful and uncluttered home decor, homes and landscapes built with local

    materials, and home environments blended with nature.

    These simple ideals were:

    • simple, refined aesthetics (beauty)

    • simple, functional design (utility)

    • living simply

    • social reform (individuals more rational; society more harmonious)

    • the virtue of a well decorated middle class home

    • handcrafted objects

    • high quality craftsmanship

    •the joy of working and crafting with one's own hands

    • creating objects well designed and affordable to all

    • creating harmony with nature

    • using and sustaining natural materials

    • maintaining a sense of space and environment

    • staying spiritually connected to home and nature

    • creating space for inner peace away from jobs and factories

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    Key Elements

    • Built of natural materials. Craftsman homes are typically built of real wood, stone and brick.

    • Built-in furniture and light fixtures. Built-ins were the hallmark feature of the Arts and Crafts era. Built-in

    cabinets allowed the furnishings to be part of the architecture, ensuring design unity and economic use of

    space. Even the light fixtures are often part of the design.

    • Fireplace. A fireplace was the symbol of family in the Arts and Crafts movement, so most homes feature a

    dominant fireplace in the living room and a large exterior chimney.

    • Porches. Most homes in the Craftsman style have porches with thick square or round columns and stone

    porch supports.

    • Low-pitched roofs. The homes typically have a low roof with wide eaves and triangular brackets.

    • Exposed beams. The beams on the porch and inside the house are often exposed.

    Open floor plan. The Arts and Crafts Movement rejected the small, boxy rooms like those in Victorian houses.

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    The Arts and Crafts Movement supported economic and social reforms as away of attacking the industrialised age.

    Many Art and Craft associations sprung up in this period such as Home Arts and Industries Association. This

    association aimed to support and promote rural handicrafts. The Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society, formed in 1887

    promoted embroidery, fabrics, upholstery and furniture. The Guild of Handicraft (1888) was another association

    set up during this time.

    The philosophy behind the Arts and Crafts movement believed that the industrial revolution had made man less

    creative as ‘his’ craft skills had been removed from the manufacturing process. One aim of the movement was to

    put ‘man’ back in to the design and manufacturing process, Craft skills and good honest design would again be

    central to the manufacturing process.

    The Arts and Crafts movement influence other art movements such as the Bauhaus and Modernism, movements

    that believed in simplicity of design. Bauhaus and modernism believed in design and manufacture that the general

    public could afford. They also believed that simple functional designs should look good and be aesthetically

    pleasing. Manufactured products should be enjoyed for the way they looked and not only for their functional

    application.

    simple craft work

    manufactured by one person

    or a small group

    not mass production

    affordable for the generalpublic

    manufactured in small

    numbers

    The Art Nouveau movement,

    encouraged the industrial

    production of ornate , highly

    decorated products. Art

    Nouveau products were sold to

    the rich, to decorate their

    houses and they can still be

    seen on public buildings such

    as railway stations or

    monuments, that were

    constructed in the nineteenth

    century.

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    The Arts and Crafts Movement Cast of Characters

    BRITISH:

    John Ruskin (1819-1900)

    William Morris (1834-1896)Walter Crane (1845-1915)

    Charles Francis Annesley Voysey (1854-1923)

    Charles Robert Ashbee (1863-1942)

    Charles Rennie Mackintosh (1868-1928)

    AMERICAN:

    Charles Comfort Tiffany (1829 –1907)

    Charles Limbert (1854-1923)

    Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)

    Gustav Stickley (1858-1942)

    Charles Fletcher Lummis (1859-1928)

    Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959)

    Dard Hunter (1883 –1966)

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    Red House, Kent

    Red House was designed by Philip Webb in 1859, as a home

    for William Morris and his wife Janey. Webb was a friend of

    Morris and this was his first building. With its steep, red-

    tiled roof, based on medieval models, and its emphasis on

    natural materials, the house became a major influence inBritain and abroad. It was furnished and decorated by

    Morris's friends and family. There were hangings and

    embroideries by Morris and Janey, tiles and murals by

    Edward Burne-Jones, furniture, metalwork and tableware by

    Webb. Their work led to the creation of Morris, Marshall,

    Faulkner & Co., the firm that brought Morris's designs to a

    wider public. Morris spent five years at Red House, some of

    the happiest in his life, surrounded by a community of

    friends and artists. The house was then in the midst of

    orchards and countryside: now it is an oasis in a suburban

    environment.

    Architect Philip Webb

    Location  Bexleyheath, in Kent, England

    Date  1859 timeline

    Building Type  house

    Construction System  masonry, brickClimate temperate

    Context  rural

    Style  English Romantic House, Arts

    and Crafts, Eclectic Gothic

    Notes  Designed for William Morris. Informal

    plan, plain red brick.

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    Morris envisioned Red House as being not only a family home, but also a background to his ongoing artistic

    work.[19] He wanted it to be situated in a rural area that was not far from London,[20] and chose to search in Kent

    because it was his favourite county; he particularly enjoyed its geographical mix of large open spaces with small

    hills and rivers, favourably contrasting it to the flat expanse of his native.

    Unique in its design, Red House was fashioned to an L-shaped plan, with two stories and a high-pitched roof made

    of red tile. The large-hall, dining room, library, morning-room, and kitchen were located on the ground floor, whileon the first floor were situated the main living-rooms, the drawing-room, the studio, and the bedrooms. The

    servants' quarters were larger than in most contemporary buildings, reflecting the embryonic ideas regarding

    working class conditions which would lead Morris and Webb to become socialists in later life. Windows were

    positioned to suit the design of the rooms rather than to fit an external symmetry; thus a variety of different

    window types are present, including tall casements, hipped dormers, round-headed sash-windows, and bull's eye

    windows. The house lacked any applied ornamentation, with its decorative features instead serving constructional

    purposes, such as the arches over the windows, and the louvre in the open roof over the staircase.

    The architecture of Red House was inspired by styles of British design from the thirteenth-century. Many other

    items of furniture were specially designed by Webb, including the oak dining table, other tables, chairs, cupboards,

    copper candlesticks, fire dogs, and glass tableware. The plastered walls and ceilings were given simple designs in

    tempera, although more complex designs were planned for the hall and main living rooms. Stained glass windows

    were installed in the house, with designs created by Burne-Jones and Webb. The garden was similarly unique in its

    design, with Morris insisting on integration of the design of the house and garden; the latter was divided into four,

    small square gardens by trellises

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    The L-shaped layout of the house proved effective

    in maximizing the efficient and clarity of room

    distribution. The asymmetrical nature was also

    important because the house was modeled after

    traditional Gothic structures; also along this

    theme, there are steep roofs, prominent chimneys,

    cross gables and exposed-beam ceilings