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by Holly Cecil The British Arts and Crafts Movement flourished between its peak years of 1880-1910, reviving artisan-produced decorative arts in an increasingly industrial era. Founding visionaries John Ruskin and William Morris, inspired a new generation of designers, high standards of traditional craftsmanship, and social reform for workers.
This series of documentary shorts analyzes key Arts & Crafts workshops and designers in the movement through representative objects in the University of Victoria Legacy Art Galleries collection. These objects also demonstrate the wide range of materials and processes that Arts & Crafts artisans perfected — from ceramics to furniture, and stained glass to metalwork, including silver, silver-plate, copper, brass and pewter. This undergraduate research project, completed in the Art History and Visual Studies (AHVS) Department, University of Victoria (Canada), was supported by a Jamie Cassels Undergraduate Research Award (JCURA), 2014. Research supervisor: Prof. Erin Campbell, AHVS Department, University of Victoria. Contact Information:email Holly Cecil: cecil [at] uvic [dot] ca © Holly Cecil 2015 (where applicable) |

