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Aesthetic Movement Clock, the enamel face designed by Walter Crane and Lewis Day

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Clocks1867 of 3964Ansonia chime clock an very rare antique.Two items by Albin Muller, leader of the Darmstadt Artists' Colony
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    Posted 9 years ago

    kiwipaul
    (117 items)

    In the early 2000's I picked up "The Aesthetic Movement" by Elizabeth Aslin in a second hand book shop and was fascinated by this Victorian prelude to Art Nouveau.

    After reading more of the book when I got home, I logged on to eBay and nearly fell out of my chair when this clock came up in one of my searches. I had just finished reading about this exact type of clock in the book a few minutes earlier (p68). Needless to say the seller didn't know anything about the clock, however they could see it was quality, and I had to pay what seemed like a lot of money at the time.

    The hand decorated blue and white face is detailed with gilt, and comprises a 7.5 inch square enamel face depicting the nursery rhyme, "Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush", from Walter Crane’s 1878 children’s book "The Baby’s Opera". The clock's numerals are examples of the stylised calligraphy of Lewis Day.

    The dial is marked Elkington & Co, whose art department, headed by Albert A. Willms, produced exquisite enamelled items for a brief period of only eight or nine years, commencing in the mid 1870's.

    The mahogany case is 17 inches high and 11 inches wide, and the clock has a quality eight day quarter striking movement by Winterhalder & Hofmeier.

    Walter Crane (1845-1915) studied under John Ruskin. He was one of the first artists to use brilliant colour in children's picture books, and is among the most famous C19th book illustrators. His work is strongly influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites, and he made a major stylistic contribution to the development of Art Nouveau. He worked with William Morris at Merton Abbey in 1883, designing the Goose Girl tapestry, and in 1888 he helped launch the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society, of which he was the first President. The object of the society was to draw attention to the Arts and Crafts movement, and the craftsmen included William Morris and Edward Burne-Jones. From 1894 onwards Crane worked for Morris' Kelmscott Press. He was appointed part time Director of Design at the Manchester School of Art from 1893-96 and the Principal of the Royal College of Art from 1897-98.

    Lewis Foreman Day (1845-1910) was an artist and prolific writer on design subjects, most famous today for his wallpaper designs and calligraphy, in which can be seen the early seeds of Art Nouveau. In the early 1880’s he led a group of writers, designers, and theorists known as the Fifteen, who in 1884 merged with The Art Workers Guild, that included Walter Crane. In 1888 members of the Guild formed the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society, including Philip Webb, William Arthur Smith Benson, Lewis Day, William Lethaby and William de Morgan. Their first exhibition in 1888 at the New Gallery included works from their own members, the Century Guild, Morris & Co and the Guild of Handicraft. The latter, also founded in 1888, was headed by the architect Charles. R. Ashbee, and Day and Ashbee were the Guild of Handicrafts' principal designers.

    In their later careers Walter Crane and Lewis Day continuing their long association to design a number of the most spectacular Royal Lancastrian ceramic lustre pieces for Pilkington & Co.

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    Comments

    1. kiwipaul kiwipaul, 9 years ago
      Walter Crane and Lewis Day were heavy hitters in the Arts & Crafts leagues. A clock like this, destined to be centrepiece in an Arts & Crafts home, certainly carried a message beyond the children's nursery rhyme.

      This Aesthetic Movement clock face is a reminder of the forces at work in England in the latter half of the 19th Century. In 1865 Walter Crane was strongly influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites after seeing Ford Madox Brown’s painting "Work". http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/brown/work.jpg

      This depicts a street scene with labourers being observed by the historian, Thomas Carlyle, and the leader of the Christian Socialist movement, F. D. Maurice. The theme is the place of labour in contemporary society and the larger significance of different types of work, for Carlyle and Maurice are themselves being portrayed as workers in ideas.

      Madox Brown was reflecting the tensions within Victorian society that were leading to the emergence of the Labour Movement, and also identifying a developing concern in Victorian art, the relationship of art to work. William Morris asserted that art and work should be one and the same thing, and the hyphenated term "art-work" acquired special meaning within the Arts and Crafts movement.

      In this context Walter Crane’s nursery rhyme on the clock dial takes on new layers of meaning, for Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush is a work chant, akin to a sea shanty, inducting the young into the disciplines of work. The thought might even have been on the artists' minds that women should also be active participants in the Work of Art.
    2. vetraio50 vetraio50, 9 years ago
      Just Fabulous .... A Dream Item.
      Crane & Day were amazing artists !!!!
      When do the Royal Lancastrian pieces start ????
    3. kiwipaul kiwipaul, 9 years ago
      Hey Vetraio50 - Hope you're not asking when I'll show some Royal Lancastrian, unfortunately I don't have any.

      If you're asking re dates Crane and Day worked together on Lancastrian, here's one from 1906: http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=77971&partId=1&searchText=&images=&people=88666&place=&from=&fromDate=&to=&toDate=&object=&subject=&matcult=&technique=&school=&material=&ethname=&ware=&escape=&museumno=&bibliography=&citation=&sortBy=&peoA=88666-2-32&plaA=&termA=&page=1
    4. vetraio50 vetraio50, 9 years ago
      Hi Paul ... I was hoping for some lustre pieces !!!
      Thanks for the link though !
    5. Bluboi Bluboi, 9 years ago
      This is lovely, Paul! The numerals on the face are works of art in their own right. Thanks for the detailed history -- we tend to see Movements as finite times with a start and end date, yet this is such a great example of how a variety of complex ideas come together (and then often splinter off into other Movements).
    6. kiwipaul kiwipaul, 9 years ago
      One of the great things about posting pieces on CW is that you get to look at them anew. Little doubt that the four maidens dancing around the mulberry bush represent the four seasons, something you could only pick up looking at the coloured image from "The Baby’s Opera".

      The girl in the yellow dress will be spring, in the green dress is summer, and in the brown dress with the scarf is autumn, while the girl in the heavy bonnet and cape will be winter.
    7. surfdub66 surfdub66, 9 years ago
      Stunning piece and an extra stunning piece of info !! :-))

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