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William Morris
The Artist
By W. Henry Winslow
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William Morris whose name stands for admirable things in the world of
literature, of art, and of socialism, was a British poet, painter,
craftsman and social reformer. Morris was one of the principal
founders of the British Arts and Crafts Movement and is best known
for his wallpaper, textile and furniture designs. He was born in
1834 and died in 1896.
At first sight it might seem
that he lived three separate lives. Today people are
puzzled to know what are the relationships between the man who wrote
the Earthly Paradise, and the man who set the fashion of
low-toned wall papers and hangings and beautiful carpets, or he who
devoted Sunday hours to radical speeches to London working-men, or
to writing for his paper, The Commonweal. To show how these
were one and the same men, and that whatever else he was, he was
first and last and always the artist, is the object of this article.
At the date of Morris’ death,
October 3, 1896, he was in his sixty-third year, having been born at
Walthamstow, Essex, March 24, 1834, his father being a successful
man of business, who died, leaving a moderate fortune, when his son
was about fourteen. The boy went from Marlborough school to Exeter
College, Oxford,
where
he first met Edward Burne-Jones, the artist, his life-long friend;
and where both at one time thought of taking orders. A little later
Morris made the acquaintance of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, whose
influence was not lessened when through him Morris met his future
wife, Jane Burden, a working-class woman whose pale skin, languid
figure, and abundant coppery hair were considered by Morris and his
friends the epitome of beauty. To Rossetti was dedicated in 1858 The Defence of Guinevere and other poems. Morris, an amateur of
medievalism, in his attempt to rehabilitate the guilty Guinevere,
was certainly over-weighted, and the result is mainly artificial and
ineffective posing. Morris attempts to create a realistic drama
dealing with the illicit romantic passion between Queen Guinevere
and Sir Lancelot, figures from an Arthurian romance.
The Earthly Paradise,
published in 1868-1870, is generally considered to be Morris’
literary monument, though he himself declared his high water mark
reached in The Story of Sigurd the Volsung and the Fall of the
Nibelungs published a little later. Like some other monuments,
the quality of The Earthly Paradise is perhaps hardly
commensurate with its bulk. Yet it abounds in beautiful, if
sometimes too archaic lines. The simple motive upon which the
twenty-four long poems depend, like beads upon a slender thread is
almost the oldest in literature, that of a company of persons
accidentally brought together, who narrate stories in turn. In this
case, some are of classic and others of Norse origin, the narrators
coming in search of the "Earthly Paradise" to an unnamed western land,
where on the occasion of high festivals they tell these tales to
their entertainers. The analogy with Boccaccio’s Decameron and Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales is obvious; and as Chaucer
deliberately patterned after Boccaccio, so did Morris in a degree
imitate Chaucer. All three poets, by a coincidence, sprang from
mercantile families, inheriting not a little of the commercial
spirit, while decrying mere commercialism; and the same may be said
of Mr. Ruskin, Morris’ contemporary master and exemplar.

For an average lifetime the
happiest hours of Morris, who declared his life to have been a happy one,
were spent in these workshops and in the famous Kelmscott Press,
adjoining his Hammersmith house.
That
which makes Morris’ experiment of reviving handwork so extraordinary
is that this idealist, after sinking his money in what seemed a
hopeless crusade against cheap machine-made fabrics, without any
skilled assistants, and with little demand for such products, was
able to make his industries profitable like the most practical
persons. Morris had no serious competition on his own ground, it being
impossible to “grind out” such wares as his or to produce them on a
scale to overstock the market, and by reason of his wise generosity,
he had only dependable and friendly workpeople about him. It has
been objected that Morris, whose favorite maxim was “Art made by the
people for the people, as a joy to the maker and the user,” sold his
wares to the well-to-do at good prices. Caring for the maker even
more than for the user with good wages and cheerful surroundings
compelled good prices for the finished product.
Morris came to see that if in a
civilization like ours there were to be any opening for good art, it
must come through the example of the wealthier class, and what would
begin as an unintelligent fashion might end in an educated demand
for better things; until in the descending social scale it should
reach the poorer class. So it happened that the man who wrote:
“Never have I been in a rich man’s house which would not have been
bettered for a bonfire of nine-tenths of all it held,” found his
customers among this very class.

The
medium chosen was the creation of truthful designs for
stained glass, wallpapers, carpets, furniture, and decorative art
generally. From the small beginnings in these various departments
grew large and important establishments and factories that
in their specialties stood unrivaled. The
first grand success which Morris achieved was in the stained
glass displayed at the English Exposition, 1862.
From that hour success was certain, and orders in that one branch
were constantly at least a year in advance. "Morris & Co." established a consulting office
in London, where a member of the firm or a competent clerk was
always in waiting to give advice, show specimens, etc. If desired,
the plan of a house being given, they were ready to draft to the
smallest detail designs for furniture, carpets, inlaid floors,
wall-papers, carvings, and interior decorations of every kind.
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THE STAR OF
BETHLEHEM, A MORRIS TAPESTRY
FROM A PAINTING BY E. BURNE-JONES. |
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DESIGNS FOR
CRETONS BY MORRIS |
The opinion seems to be that Morris was
not an artist in the full sense of the word, but a sort of
“Jack-of-all-trades;” and he says of himself: “I cannot claim to
represent any one craft, the division of labor which has furthered
competitive commerce till none can resist its influence having
pressed hard on the field of culture, thwarting me to the degree of
forcing me to learn many crafts, preventing me according to the
proverb from mastering any.” But this is the familiar modesty of
powerful men, simply indicating the height of their aspiration, as
compared with its fulfillment.
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WILLIAM MORRIS
CARPET DESIGNS |
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If to spend ones life in elaborating a
few pictures, or making statues for the wealthy, each costing a
fortune, is to be an artist, Morris was not one; but if to be
sensitive to all beauty everywhere, and to defend it passionately
against vandalism, to be alive to the peculiar powers of the arts,
to sympathetically design and successfully work in most of them,
and to be a worldwide influence in these things, if this is to be an
artist, then was Morris beyond question facile princeps. The
common idea that the market value and material of a work of art
determine the rank of the artist, may possibly have to do with the
notion that such a one as Morris is “merely a decorator.” On the
contrary, all which the artist does is and must be art, no matter
what the material or the current value, and its true spirit is often
found in some trinket of the great schools; while the so-called
architecture costing millions, is too often nothing but a hideous
eye-sore of false construction.
If Morris had not done so much and so
varied work with his own hands -- thus differing materially from Mr.
Ruskin, for instance – one would hesitate to quote so much from his
writings; but however questionable theory may be divorced from
practice, theory which is justified by practice cannot fail to be
valuable.
The following condensed extract is from
an address called “Beauty of Life,” asking the reader to observe the
humanitarian spirit, the interest in the individual workman, which
led logically to thesocialistic phase of Morris’ career:
Refined and educated
men who have traveled in Italy and Egypt sit down in their
own homes amid brutally vulgar and hideous things. The lack
of art, or rather the murder of art, that curses our streets
from the sordidness of the surroundings of the lower
classes, has its counterpart in the dullness and vulgarity
of the middle classes, and the double-distilled dullness and
scarcely less vulgarity of the upper class. What is the
remedy? Education, not for the few, but for the many. Better
civilization for all, freed from slavery, ancient or modern,
from the existence of a social residuum: Unmitigated,
heartbreaking, slavish drudgery was never intended to exist
as a permanent condition. . . . While extending the
decencies of life, let us guard the traditions and work of
the past, and cherish every germ of art. Let us also heed
the green grass and the fresh leaves, the running waters and
the omnipresent gift of light and air. . . . Many Manchester
folk profess to care for art and are picture-buyers, and yet
in Manchester the smoke-act is a dead letter, showing how
little love or respect for beauty her art-patrons really
possess. . . . Another thing, -- don’t leave your
sandwich-papers lying about your hills and in your public
gardens; and how about the ugly posters, and do you try to
preserve the trees? Anyone who wantonly cuts down a tree,
need make no pretense of caring for art. . . . |
Another phase of Morris’ activity was
connected with the Kelmscott Press, which has made his name welcome
to all bibliophiles, as his art products have endeared it to
art-lovers everywhere. His active interest in book-making as a
branch of the fine arts dates from 1888, his idea being to hark back
to the days of the great book-makers and, following in their steps,
to produce books whose paper, type, ink and decoration should all be
of the best, and worthy of the best literature. This led him to use
entirely new and heavy type of his own design, free from the
emasculated delicacy of modern fonts, and without their teasing hair
lines, the result being strong jet black lettering, necessarily
larger and more legible. The wretched paper of the day was rejected
for tough hand-made paper which was found to require the
substitution of the old hand-press for the steam-press, implying
small and therefore costlier editions. Naturally only the best ink
could be used. The outcome of all this has been forty-four works,
some of them in several volumes, printed by the Kelmscott Press
since 1891, when its first issue appeared, -- Morris’ own “Story of
the Glittering Plain.”
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| THE FIRST PAGE OF CHAUCER'S
"CANTERBURY TALES." |
The last, and by far the most important
volume, the works of Geoffrey Chaucer in folio with elaborate
foliated borders designed by Morris and eighty woodcuts drawn by Sir
Edward Burne-Jones being on its way to subscribers in many lands as
Morris neared his end at Hammersmith.
Beginning with a man and a boy to
assist him, and later occupying the house next his own, he came to
require still more rooms for his men and presses, and again, as in
the case of his decorative manufactures, he found his work so much
in demand that he had only to announce a forthcoming book with the
number of copies and the price he thought best to put upon it, to
have his subscription lists speedily filled. Thus the whole edition
of Chaucer was subscribed for six mouths before it was ready for
delivery.
It is needed only to look
at the face of Morris, his stern brow and brooding, deeply
penetrating eye, to recognize the man of insight, the seer. His
seafarers bluffness, leonine locks, blue shirt, cape-coat and slouch
hat made him a noticeable figure everywhere and, without the least
show of affectation, emphasized naturally his strange individuality.
Morris’ funeral took place on an October day, the funeral train
leaving the plain old-fashioned house on Hammersmith Mall, London,
for the yet older Kelmscott manor-house near Lechdale, Oxfordshire.
Within a few yards of it his remains were interred, in the village
churchyard, close to the roadside hedge, a clerical college-friend
reading the service at the grave. Besides his immediate family, Sir
Edward Burne-Jones, Walter Crane, John Burns, Mr. Richmond and Mr.
Frampton of the Royal Academy and representatives of the South
Kensington Museum and the Arts and Crafts Society were present, with
a large company of friends. A noticeable feature of the arrangements
was the carriage of the coffin from the train at Lechdale, through
three miles of hedge-lined country lanes upon an open farmer’s wain,
beneath a canopy of green vines and branches. It was of unpolished
oak with handles of the wrought iron dear to artists, the name and
the birth and death dates being incised in the wood. Pieces of
oriental embroidery served as a pall. The day was thoroughly
autumnal; the heavens wept gently; and drifts of golden foliage lay
lightly on the clay of their departed lover.
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INFO:
William Morris 19th Century Wallpaper Patterns
Historic images of Arts and Crafts wallpaper designs. |