Assignment 4 - Project 2, Stage 2

Analysis - The Strawberry Thief (William Morris)




I chose The Strawberry Thief to discuss for several reasons, the intricacy and complexity of the design, the familiarity of the piece and the story behind the image.

The Strawberry Thief is perhaps William Morris’s most well-known fabric design, it was produced in 1883 by a method
called indigo-discharge. This was an ancient technique which Morris developed throughout the late 19th Century for his own textiles produced by his firm Morris & Co who specialised in furnishing fabrics & wallpapers. Whilst the company took commissions for interior designs, it also sold to the general public which was an important part of the Morris & Co.’s ethos - that good design should be available to all. 

The technique of indigo-discharge means the fabric is dyed indigo and the colour removed from the cloth by printing with bleach to create the design. Subsequent colours are added by printing with blocks, the technique is time-consuming and costly but results in great depth of colour. 

Morris had been working on this method for several years and finally achieved the outcome he wanted with The Strawberry Thief design. Due to the printing method the fabric was expensive however this did not deter sales and it became one of Morris’s most popular designs.

The design for the piece came from thrushes attacking the strawberry plants at Morris’s house, Kelmscott Manor, where they were frequent visitors to the kitchen garden. It is believed that the thrushes were drawn by Philip Webb, an architect and fellow founder of Morris & Co, due to Morris’s inability to draw birds.  It is a lovely scene of domesticity in England which has become world re-known today and is still an extremely popular print with The National Trust reproducing the design on to bags, tea towels and ceramics.

The Strawberry Thief has feeling of opulence created through the complexity of design and depth of colour whilst being a piece of everyday life. There is no desire for the image to be a exact replica of the act of strawberry theft itself, the plants are stylized and carefully placed in the design to ensure the success of the repeat of the pattern. The architectural qualities of the plants are strong and their shapes create medieval emblems within the design. The flow of their stems curve round to encompass flower heads which are a strong feature to ensure a balance with the birds.

The pale indigo is used in the leaves in the background to create an extra depth to the piece as they interlock behind the flowers and stalks. The romanticism in the piece allows the birds to be both the perpetrator of the crime and the hero of the design, without them the image would have less of a story, the shape of their bodies and their patterned feathers soften the design, the addition of strawberries has the same effect. 

The birds and strawberries more naturalistic style complements the emblematic and architectural flowers and leaves. The design has a strong medieval feel which is likely to have been influenced by the Pre-Raphaelite movement, many of whom were friends of Morris.

There is also humour when the birds manage to steal a couple of the berries in their mouths, sneaking them away whilst their fellow birds provide a song.

Sources:



Analysis - Unikko (Marimekko)



One of my favourite textile patterns is Unikko produced by Marimekko, the pattern is so strong and simple it is used on anything from dress fabrics to ceramics.

The longevity of the design is in its simplicity, designed in 1964 by Maija Isola employed by the design firm Marimekko, the image is still fresh today and is seen on stationery, bags and even hot air balloons.
Marion Hume from Time Magazine said of the design: ‘Unikko poppy (1964), originally in red and in blue, which may be one of the most widely recognized prints on earth.’  Hume, Marion (April 9, 2008). "Time Magazine". Luxury Source. Time Magazine U.S.

The different colour ways are also essential to its popularity, whilst the red version is perhaps the most iconic; the other colours ensure that different tastes can be catered for. The two reds in the original version are challenging and unsubtle; the scarlet-red petals border the orange-red in a clash of colour which creates vitality and movement in the pattern.
The vivid colours are off-set by the centre of the poppy and stalk which are in black. The flowers are flat in both colour and shape however they tumble around the repeat pattern in a fun care-free manner. The design is bursting with exuberance. Some of the other colour ways are more subtle but whilst, depending on the colours, can be more calming they still have strength in the design.


In the same year Andy Warhol was creating several pictures and screen-prints based on flowers which are abstract in their interpretation. Both Warhol and Isola created flower images which were abstract representations rather than chintz naturalistic drawings, these created strength in the flowers and made them the focus and hero of the piece rather than an arrangement of softer flowing blooms.

The pop-art influence in Unikko is clearly evident in the flat colour and limited colour treatment of the design. Whilst Unikko was very popular in 1964, the design has remained the most purchased Marimekko pattern,  proving its durability.

Isola produced over 500 designs for Marimekko but she is most well-known for Unikko, a design she created against the wishes of her employer (Armi Ratia) who had expressly stated that the firm’s designs should not be floral. Isola’s designs took influences from her travels and are often based on flora and fauna but in a very abstract way.

Sources:


Analysis - "Slit Tapestry Red/Green" (Gunta Stölzl)


After visiting the Bauhaus exhibition at the Barbican in May this year I wanted to analyse a work from this school. The work the Bauhaus produced was and still is extremely influential and I really wanted to look at one of the wall hangings I saw there.

I chosen Gunta Stölzl’s ‘Slit Tapestry Red/Green’ produced in 1927/8 as the detail and colour are so fascinating and complex. At first the whole piece over whelms the onlooker with a riot of colour and shapes but the intricate interlocking weaves are mesmerising. 

The piece was produced after the Bauhaus had moved from Weimar to Dessau which is significant in the improvements in the weaving facilities. When Stölzl’s enrolled at the Bauhaus some of the disciplines were not available for women to study, she initially studied in the glass workshop and painting, enrolling on Joseph Itten’s colour courses. Itten encouraged students to combine colours to make patterns by interlocking shapes. 

Stölzl was also influenced by other Bauhaus painters at the time, Klee and Kandinsky. The wall hanging discussed owes a lot to the colour palette of these two painters, they are not afraid to use contrasting and clashing colours next to each other to achieve the look they required.

In 1927 when she produced the wall hanging, Stölzl was a junior master at the Bauhaus responsible for the Weaving Workshop. This was a financially viable concern taking many commissions. The new facilities included jacquard looms and new dyeing facilities. Stölzl wanted to move the image of weaving away from a predominately female craft and to a form of industrial design. She focused on teaching techniques of using the loom and dyeing along with geometry and maths. In the numerous sketches she made for ‘Slit Tapestry Red/Green’ the clear use of geometric blocks can be seen.

The wall hanging fits in with the ethos of the Bauhaus movement that crafts should be functional but add artistic impression. 

Stölzl  wrote in her article The Development of the Bauhaus Weaving Workhop, 1931; ‘Woven fabrics in a room are equally important in the larger entity of architecture as the colour of the walls, the furniture and household equipment. They have to serve their purposes, have to be integrated, and have to fulfil with ultimate precision the requirements we place on colour, material, and texture.’ 


‘Slit Tapestry Red/Green’ is filled with so many tightly produced patterns the piece took several months to complete. The interwoven blocks of straight colour in the middle of the piece almost look like a factory with the waves of a river running beneath. The more the viewer looks the more imagery can be seen in the piece which gives it more interest and depth. 

The Bauhaus movement was extremely revolutionary and the wall hangings were not produced on a mass-market scale, nevertheless the influence of the designers and artists of the time was significant around the world.


Sources :
Bauhaus, The Barbican 2012
http://bauhaus-online.de/en/atlas/personen/gunta-stoelzl
http://www.guntastolzl.org
Gunta Stölzl - The Development of the Bauhaus Weaving Workhop, published in the journal "bauhaus", July 1931.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bauhaus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunta_St
ölzl