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Teapot and Creamer, Christopher Dresser c. 1880 Manufactured by James Dixon and Sons |
What year would you think that was made? How about this one?
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Teapot, Christopher Dresser c. 1880 Manufactured by James Dixon and Sons |
Both of those objects date to around 1880 and they were designed by Christopher Dresser, a man regarded as the world's first, independent industrial designer. I saw both at a retrospective of Dresser's work back in 2004 at the Cooper Hewitt in New York. The museum displayed a collection of Dresser's creations in an exhibit called The Shock of the Old. The exhibit then moved on to London's Victoria and Albert Museum where it was called Christopher Dresser: A Design Revolution.
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Vase, Christopher Dresser c. 1880 Linthorpe Art Pottery, Yorkshire |
I was reminded of that exhibit because I'm working on a post with the marketing folks at MOMA on exhibit they have coming up about modernist kitchens in the early 20th Century. That's coming next week, but I want to dwell on Mr. Dresser here today.
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Toast Rack, Christopher Dresser c. 1880 Manufactured by James Dixon and Sons |
Prior to seeing those teapots at the Cooper Hewitt, I'd always though that modernism was strictly a 20th century impulse but as you can see from Dresser's work here, modernism's roots dig well into the 19th Century. So even though the conventional wisdom holds that household objects from 130 years ago didn't look like this:
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Decanter, Christopher Dresser c. 1879 Manufactured by James Dixon and Sons |
Dresser's popularity at the time shows that the Rococo mishmash of ornamentation that most people think of when they think Victorian wasn't universal.
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Footed bowl, Christopher Dresser c. 1885 Manufactured by Elkington and Company |
Dresser was an industrial designer, his work was meant to be mass produced and to sell. Of course some of his projects were more typical of the time. But what interests me about him are his projects that look forward to a new era all together.
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Decanter, Christopher Dresser c. 1879 Manufactured by Hukin and Heath |
He was from all accounts an interesting man. He was a botanist by trade and was awarded his doctorate before he traded in his study of plants for the study and creation of objects. It was through his observations of the economy of plant design that he started to rethink the decorative arts. A trip to Japan in 1876 altered his views on ornament permanently. His willingness to look to the forms of other cultures, notably Japanese and Arabian, and to integrate them into his work spawned the wide acceptance of these forms and styles.
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Toast Rack, Christopher Dresser c. 1881 Manufactured by Hukin and Heath |
Like many of his contemporaries, Dresser was involved in the movement to reform design. Remember that the later 19th Century was a time of great reform movements. The wealth generated by the industrial revolution spawned a class of people who were determined to reform and reinvent their entire society. Design reform was of a piece with sanitary reform, prison reform, workplace reform, etc. The Victorians reformers were going to improve the lot of everybody. Design reform was an attempt to mass produce tasteful objects for the middle and lower classes. Dresser's unadorned objects were not only new, they were less-costly to produce and his sensibilities fit the time when he lived to a T.
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Chair, Christopher Dresser c. 1880 Manufactured by Chubb and Company for the Art Furnishers' Alliance |
Christopher Dresser was a household name in England by the time he died in 1904, I don't think it's a stretch to say he was the 19th Century's Philippe Starck. He was a fascinating man and you can read more of Dresser's biography on the British Design Museum's website.
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Tureen, Christopher Dresser c. 1880 Manufactured by Hukin and Heath |
I'm old enough to have had a great-grandmother who was keeping house at the time when Dresser was plying his trade. I wonder what she would have thought of his take on their times, the Victorian Era?
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Fan, Christopher Dresser c. 1880 for the Art Furnishers' Alliance |