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British artist William Morris (1834–1896) led a quiet rebellion of “beautiful useful things,” rendering patterns of vines and flowers, making them into textiles and papers, and starting a pr ...
Nearly 130 years after his death, the British artist William Morris’ designs are everywhere, from wallpapers and dinnerware to phone cases and hand cream. The ubiquity of Morris’ intricate ...
William Morris & Art from the Islamic World is the ... to three gorgeous 16th-century Ottoman-Syrian vine trellis tiles in indigo, turquoise and green. Though Morris never ventured east of Italy ...
The designer, artist, author and all-round polymath William Morris (1834-1896) championed the democratisation of good taste, said Nancy Durrant in The Times. An "ardent socialist", he famously ...
While the noted Arts and Crafts designer’s patterns have never gone out of production, they are enjoying a resurgence in popularity. A leading figure of the British Arts and Crafts movement ...
Marcus Waithe does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond ...
When they come into bud, a courting peacock would break them. The Victorian arts and craftsman William Morris had two superb peacocks in his dining room at Kelmscott Manor, his country retreat in ...
William Morris's willow bough print was hanging at Wightwick Manor and Gardens in Wolverhampton, but becoming damaged by salts. Morris's orginal blocks were still used at a Loughborugh factory so ...
Nearly 130 years after his death, the British artist William Morris’ designs are everywhere, from wallpapers and dinnerware to phone cases and hand cream. The ubiquity of Morris’ intricate ...