: More than 300 of the finest examples of the Arts and Crafts
Movement dating from 1880 to 1945 will be on display in
"International Arts and Crafts: William Morris to Frank Lloyd
Wright," March 18 to June 18 at de Young Museum. Organized by the
Victoria and Albert Museum, London, this is the most
comprehensive exhibition ever assembled on the Arts and Crafts
Movement. It is also the first to look at it from a truly
international perspective, tracing the development of the
movement from its flourishing in Britain in the 1880s to its
interpretation and development in the United States, Europe,
Scandinavia and Japan.
The objects on view have been drawn from private and public
collections all over the world, with approximately a third of
them coming from the V&A's collections. They include
textiles, stained glass, furniture, ceramics, metalwork, jewelry,
books, architecture, photography, paintings and sculpture.
Altogether they serve to illustrate how Arts and Crafts became
the first British design movement to have widespread and
recognizable international influence.
A special feature of the exhibition is four specially created
room sets emphasizing the importance of the Arts and Crafts home
and interior. There will be two British sets - one urban and one
rural - one American Craftsman room and one Japanese model room
dating from 1928 and recreated recently with rediscovered
objects.
Charles Francis Annesley Voysey (English, 1857-1941) Tomkinson
and Adam (maker) carpet, 1896. Woolen pile on a jute warp,
machine woven (Kidderminster), established 1869. Made for
Liberty & Company, London English, established 1875. Lent
by the Victoria and Albert Museum ©Victoria & Albert
Museum. -Christine Smith photo
Other highlights include objects by influential British
designers, such as Voysey, Mackintosh, Ashbee, Morris and Baillie
Scott; a group of Russian objects that have not heretofore been
exhibited in the United States; 4-meters-wide stained glass doors
by California designers Greene and Greene, as well as works by
Gustav Stickley and Frank Lloyd Wright; and Japanese objects by
craftsmen of the Mingei (folk crafts) movement.
"International Arts and Crafts" explores the influence of Arts
and Crafts through the decorative arts across all spectrums of
society from furniture made for country cottages to highly
crafted silver, glass, textiles and fine art made for houses of
the rich.
Each section of the exhibition, which is organized
geographically, explores the distinctive characteristics of the
Arts and Crafts Movement and the different ways in which its
ideas were interpreted as it developed in countries or regions
from England to Japan.
The movement emerged and flourished in Britain in the 1880s. It
then spread to continental Europe and Scandinavia from 1880 to
1914, and to America from 1890 to 1916 before its final
manifestation in the Mingei movement in Japan between 1928 and
1945. In Scandinavia, Austria, Russia and German, the Arts and
Crafts ideology led to a revival of nationalism as craftsmen
returned to indigenous materials and native traditions. In
America, the movement flourished in the Midwest, Upstate New
York, Boston and California.
For California and the West, the earliest examples of the Arts
and Crafts Movement were created in the Bay Area. In San
Francisco, the Swedenborgian Church in Pacific Heights was one of
the earliest projects realized by a group of artists, architects
and designers in the spirit of the Arts and Crafts ideals.

Arthur Dixon (English), lamp, circa 1893, brass. Made by the
Birmingham Guild of Handicraft. ©V&A Images/Victoria and
Albert Museum. -Christine Smith photo
In 1894 and 1895, artists William Keith and May Curtis
Robinson and architects Albert C. Schweinfurth, A. Page Brown, and
Bernard Maybeck collaborated on this church under the inspiration
of the Reverend Joseph Worcester. Maybeck (1862-1957), who started
as a draftsman on this project, subsequently created more than 40
private residences and several public landmarks in the area, some
in his singular Gothic style featuring massive carved timbers.
The Craftsman bungalow was popular all over the West in the
period from 1900 through 1920 and came to represent the
California lifestyle. These houses built of simple redwood
construction are found in many parts of the Bay Area,
particularly in the Berkeley Hills.
The most elaborate variations are included in the work of the
architects Charles and Henry Greene (1868-1957 and 1870-1954).
They created the ultimate Arts and Crafts houses, designing every
aspect of both the interior and the exterior, from the furniture
and textiles to the lighting fixtures.
Of all the artist craftsmen working in the Bay Area, the
metalworker Dirk van Erp (1860-1933) is the most famous. His hand
hammered copper and mica lamps have become synonymous with the
whole Arts and Crafts Movement in the United States. The
paintings and decorative work of the artists Lucia and Arthur
Mathews (1875-1945 and 1860-1945) evoked California and its
landscape.
The Mathews' picture frames, lamps and painted furniture, sold in
their furniture shop from 1906 to 1920, were often painted in
bright colors with Californian trees, poppies and Arcadian
scenes. Pottery, often seen as the most typical product of the
Arts and Crafts Movement, was made in the Bay Area at the
Arequipa Pottery.
The de Young is at 50 Hagiwara Tea Garden drive. For information,
415-750-3614 or www.thinker.org.