From Earth Veil to Wall Veil: Ruskin, Morris, Webb, and the Arts and Crafts Surface

Stephen Kite

Miracle of the Relic of the Holy Cross in Campo San Lio Fig. 5.2 Giovanni Mansueti, Miracle of the Relic of the Holy Cross in Campo San Lio (1494). Tempera on canvas, 322 脳 463 cm. Gallerie dell鈥橝ccademia, Venice (cat. 564). Photo: 漏 G.A.VE Archivio fotografico鈥斺榮u concessione del Ministero dei beni e delle attivit脿 culturali e del turismo鈥擥allerie dell鈥橝ccademia di Venezia鈥.

For John Ruskin, the first surface of Venice鈥攈is amphibious 鈥榮ea-dog of towns鈥欌攚as naturally not that of architecture itself, but the protean 鈥榮alt-smelling skin鈥 of the sandy earth whereupon it arose. And Ruskin opens his fifth volume of听Modern Painters听(1860) with this preeminent surface, 鈥楾he Earth-Veil鈥: 鈥楾he earth in its depths must remain dead and cold, incapable except of slow crystalline change; but at its surface, which human beings look upon and deal with, it ministers to them through a veil of strange intermediate being鈥.[1]听Following his acknowledged 鈥榤aster鈥 Ruskin, William Morris writes in听News from Nowhere听(1892) of 鈥榯he spirit of the new days, of our days鈥 as a 鈥榙elight in the life of the world; intense and overweening love of the very skin and surface of the earth, on which man dwells, such as a lover has in the fair flesh of the woman he loves鈥.[2]听Expanding on the ecology of the earth veil Ruskin depicts it variously as 鈥榓 carpet鈥, as 鈥榓 fantasy of embroidery鈥 of 鈥榯all spreading of foliage鈥 with the 鈥榰nerring uprightness as of temple pillars鈥 all cleaving to the underlying strength of rock or transient sand. In the first volume of听The Stones of Venice听(1851), Ruskin had demonstrated how humanity takes these material gifts of nature to form the wall, membrane-like, as 鈥榓n even and united fence, whether of wood, earth, stone or metal鈥; thus the 鈥榚arth-veil鈥 translates to what he calls the 鈥榳all-veil鈥 as the main enclosing surface in architecture.[3]

This chapter examines the emergence of Ruskin鈥檚 wall veil in his readings of the Gothic surfaces of Venice, and its translation to the wall planes of the Arts and Crafts dwellings of Morris, and Philip Webb. The medieval spirit of Red House鈥攖he home Webb designed for Morris in 1858鈥9鈥攅mulated 迟丑别听hortus ludi听of the Garden of Pleasure; a vision that would have been fully captured in the 鈥楶alace of Art鈥 Webb planned for the Morris and Burne-Jones families as a U-plan enlargement of Red House, which was never realised. Here that 鈥榣ove of the very skin and surface of the earth鈥 is expressed as a layered composition akin to the images of a medieval missal. Moving to the interior, the ecologies of nature are likewise engendered in generously layered hierarchies of surface, scaled to simplicity or splendour.

 

Reading the wall surface

Ruskin called his听St Mark鈥檚 Rest听(published in parts from 1877) the 鈥榝ourth volume鈥 of his celebrated听The Stones of Venice; here the surfaces of the city are both the leaves of a book and a salt-smelling skin, not such opposing metaphors given the vellum leaves of the medieval manuscripts beloved by Ruskin and, as will be seen, equally revered by Morris. His preface describes the autobiographies of nations as written 鈥榠n three manuscripts;鈥攖he book of their deeds, their words, and the book of their art鈥. The most 鈥榯rustworthy one is the last鈥, and 鈥榯he history of Venice is chiefly written in such manuscript. It once lay open on the waves, miraculous, like St Cuthbert鈥檚 book,鈥攁 golden legend on countless leaves鈥, but now it has been brutishly cut and singed into fragments of 鈥榖lackened scroll鈥 which Ruskin鈥檚 redeeming work鈥攁s in his earlier volumes of听Stones鈥攅nables us to recover and听read.[4]听Ruskin claims to let Venice speak for herself, telling 鈥榟er own story, in her own handwriting 鈥μ. Not a word shall听I听have to say in the matter 鈥 except to deepen the letters for you when [these cut and blackened fragments] are indistinct鈥.[5]听And, in compelling imagery, Venice鈥檚 scrolls are skin, it is 鈥榯his amphibious city鈥攖his Phocaea, or sea-dog of towns,鈥攍ooking with soft human eyes at you from the sand, Proteus himself latent in the salt-smelling skin of her鈥.[6]听Like the Proteus of Greek legend its surfaces are aspect-changing, it can be both male and female, it 鈥榗an add colours to the chameleon / Change shapes with Proteus for advantages鈥.[7]

And 鈥楳r Ruskin听was听heard鈥, as his contemporary Charles Eastlake confirms in his听A History of The Gothic Revival听of 1872, for whereas 鈥榩revious apologists for the [Gothic] Revival had relied more or less on ecclesiastical sentiment, on historical interest, or on a vague sense of the picturesque for their plea in its favour鈥, Ruskin鈥檚 vigorous prose poetry struck 鈥榓 chord of human sympathy that vibrated through all hearts鈥.[8]听His forcible readings of the pages and skins of Venice and northern Italy in听The Seven Lamps of Architecture听(1849) and听The Stones of Venice听would re-signify the surfaces of British architecture鈥攚hether high Victorian, Arts and Crafts, or proto-modernist鈥攖hrough the second half of the nineteenth century and deep into the twentieth, transforming how they were conceived, made, and symbolised.

Ruskin closes his pivotal 鈥楾he Nature of Gothic鈥 chapter in the second volume of听The Stones of Venice听with the injunction: 鈥楲astly,听Read听the sculpture. 鈥 Thenceforward the criticism of the building is to be conducted precisely on the same principles as that of a book; and it must depend on the knowledge, feeling, and not a little on the industry and perseverance of the reader, whether, even in the case of the best works, he either perceive them to be great, or feel them to be entertaining鈥.[9]听Ruskin鈥檚 own industry and perseverance in reading the scattered pages of the city that 鈥榦nce lay open on the waves鈥 is attested by the vast system of diaries, worksheets, and pocket books crammed with notes and sketches, that laid the foundations of听TheStones of Venice.[10]听Elizabeth Helsinger claims these three volumes as 鈥楻uskin鈥檚 first and his most sustained effort to combine religious and artistic reading in a single critical activity鈥.[11]听In Ruskin鈥檚 command to 鈥Read鈥 she identifies four symbolic languages. First, there is the manifest language of sculpture and pictorial iconography.[12]听Then there is the language of the picturesque, that 鈥榞olden stain of time鈥; for Ruskin the 鈥榞lory of a building 鈥 is in its Age, and in that deep sense of voicefulness, of stern watching, of mysterious sympathy 鈥 which we feel in walls that have long been washed by the passing waves of humanity鈥.[13]听Finally, there are two symbolic languages architecture develops from nature: the inherent geological record of the stones themselves, and their theological message[14]听Opening the final third volume of听The Stones of Venice, Ruskin affirms that the preceding two books have 鈥榙welt 鈥 on the historical language of stones; let us not forget this, which is their theological language鈥. As the same passage explains, such stones set 鈥榝orth [the] eternity and 鈥 TRUTH鈥 of the Deity, just as the 鈥榚lements of the universe鈥攊ts air, its water, and its flame鈥.[15]听Such exegesis is rooted in Ruskin鈥檚 evangelical upbringing and his childhood daily Bible-reading at his mother鈥檚 side. In practical terms all these languages will be laid out and contested on the surfaces of the architecture of his own and later times.

Ruskin was not the first to establish analogies between texts and the surfaces of architecture but, to reiterate Eastlake鈥檚 point, he made once vague historical or literary sentiments 鈥榲ibrate in human hearts鈥 by synthesising these iconographical, aesthetic, material, and metaphysical languages. Morris, for example, testified to the conversion experience of reading Ruskin鈥檚 writings, especially his 鈥楾he Nature of Gothic鈥 chapter of听Stones. Marc-Antoine Laugier, 脡tienne-Louis Boull茅e and others had theorised the face of building as 鈥榓rchitecture parlante鈥 in the second half of the eighteenth century. More galvanising to nineteenth-century debates was Victor Hugo鈥檚听Notre-Dame de Paris听(The Hunchback of Notre-Dame,听1831鈥2), wherein he appealed to architecture as 鈥榯he great book of mankind, man鈥檚 chief form of expression in the various stages of his development, either as force or intelligence鈥.[16]听Ruskin had read Hugo鈥檚听Notre-Dame听in the 1830s, and claimed to have hated it, but the novelist鈥檚 vision of architecture as writing the story of a nation was clearly an influence.[17]

Emergence of the Gothic wall veil

In his听John Ruskin and Victorian Architecture听(1989), Michael Brooks calls Ruskin鈥檚 wall veil his 鈥榤ost dramatic contribution to architectural terminology鈥, observing how 鈥榳all veil鈥 was soon on the lips of pupils in architectural offices in the 1850s as 鈥榓n early sign of the approaching Ruskinian wave鈥.[18]听As Eastlake writing in 1872 recalls, these pupils also 鈥榓stonished their masters by talking of the Savageness of Northern Gothic, of the Intemperance of Curves, and the Laws of Foliation鈥.[19]

What, then, is this defining surface of the wall veil? The wall is the first of Ruskin鈥檚 three divisions of architecture into walls, roofs, and apertures. He defines the wall, as noted above, as 鈥榓n even and united fence, whether of wood, earth, stone, or metal鈥. Statically, the wall has to contend with vertical or lateral forces; its strength can be increased 鈥榖y some general addition to its thickness; but if the pressure becomes very great, it is gathered up into听piers听to resist vertical pressure, and supported by听buttresses听to resist lateral pressure鈥.[20]听A true wall veil must retain its breadth of surface between the piers (where these are necessary), neither becoming a line of piers altogether, nor a continuous rampart-like buttress. On the one hand, this membrane-like sheer surface of the wall appears to owe something to the fabric analogies of Gottfried Semper, on the other it seems to anticipate the modern 鈥榗urtain wall鈥 of frame and cladding.[21]听These corollaries are certainly worth pursuing, but Ruskin鈥檚 wall veil never aims at the atectonic dematerialisation Semper sought when he argued that 鈥榯he annihilation of reality, of the material, is necessary if form is to emerge as a meaningful symbol鈥.[22]听Nor, as is well known, was Ruskin enamoured of the potential of the Crystal Palace鈥檚 iron frame and cladding. In truth, Ruskin鈥檚 wall veil is always embodied in material substance even if that may be no more than an 鈥榠ncrustation鈥 of thin sheets of marble, as cortex to a masonry core. In contrast to Semper鈥檚 desire to annihilate material, read Ruskin on the ornament of the wall veil:

But this is to be noted of all good wall ornament, that it retains the expression of听firm and massive substance, and of broad surface, and that architecture instantly declined when linear design was substituted for massive, and the sense of weight of wall was lost in a wilderness of upright or undulating rods.[23]

In the chapter of听The Stones of Venice听on 鈥楪othic Palaces鈥, Ruskin describes the domestic Gothic arising out of the Byzantine-Romanesque in terms of the broadening wall surfaces of the palazzi . Byzantine palaces, such as the thirteenth-century Ca鈥 Loredan and Ca鈥 Farsetti at the Rialto, have听no听wall veils to speak of, characterised as they are by tier on tier of continuous stilted arches on slender columns, making for maximum transparency and 鈥榬apid vertical accents鈥 stayed only by occasional narrow piers.[24]听Ruskin notes that 鈥榯he first story of a Byzantine palace consists of, perhaps, eighteen or twenty arches, reaching from one side of the house to the other鈥. Then 鈥榓 great change takes place in the Gothic period. These long arcades break, as it were, into pieces, and coagulate into central and lateral windows, and small arched doors, pierced in great surfaces of brick wall鈥.[25]听As one Byzantine family of forms of repeated arcades dies out, another Gothic one is born, made of surface and aperture. In Ruskin鈥檚 active prose, architectural styles are urgently animate: the Gothic 鈥榖reaks鈥 and 鈥榗oagulates鈥 the Byzantine arcades, marking its surfaces with the natural energy of geological forces, with that 鈥楥hangefulness鈥 of the preceding 鈥楾he Nature of Gothic鈥 chapter, that can 鈥榚xpand into a hall, coil into a staircase, or spring into a spire, with undegraded grace and unexhausted energy鈥.[26]听So, the typical tripartite Venetian palace emerges, with its more solid facade of visible wall surfaces; the arcade is now restricted to the centre of 迟丑别听piano nobile听(lighting the deep听portego听hall behind), while the sea storey now just has its water gate and a few related openings.

Ruskin鈥檚 unpublished drafts of this 鈥楪othic Palaces鈥 chapter detail these changes through the 鈥楢ngel House鈥 or Casa dell鈥橝ngelo, a complete late example of the pre-Gothic building type on the Calle di Rimedio near Campo Santa Maria Formosa. All these pre-Gothic palaces comprise a long, narrow rectangular block of two or more storeys, which contains a large, first-floor hall accessed by an external stair. There are two main layouts: in the Casa dell鈥橝ngelo type 迟丑别听long听side of the block has the main听inward-looking听facade which overlooks a walled court, not the immediate street or canal; the other layout is that of the above-mentioned Loredan and Farsetti palaces, where the facade is placed听outward facing听to canal or street, on 迟丑别听short听side of the rectangular block, transforming thereby the palace鈥檚 relationship to the urban fabric.[27]听The austere windows of the upper two storeys of the Casa dell鈥橝ngelo are 鈥榦ne of the most extensive and perfect examples鈥 of Ruskin鈥檚 transitional 鈥榮econd order鈥 of Venetian arches in their fully established form.[28]听Here the inner part of the arch is still of the stilted Byzantine form of Ruskin鈥檚 鈥榝irst order鈥, but in the ogee contour of the outer arch the Gothic spirit begins to show itself (Fig.听5.1).

Courtyard and principal facade of Casa dell鈥 Angelo, Rio di Canonica, Venice
Fig. 5.1 Courtyard and principal facade of Casa dell鈥 Angelo, Rio di Canonica, Venice (also called Ca鈥 Soranzo). Photograph. Photo: 漏 Cameraphoto Arte.

These Ruskin draft notes on the Casa dell鈥橝ngelo require extended quotation, as they show the moment when the Gothic wall surface emerges. Often, in听Stones, Ruskin closes 鈥榓n argument by offering an experience鈥, most obviously in celebrated passages such as the approach to St Mark鈥檚 of this second volume.[29]听But even the following everyday notes draw readers into a close 鈥榳atching鈥 of a building as active participants, making a possibly dry accumulation of detail alive, and the building as animate as the observer:

Fronting the bridge which crosses the Rio de Palazzo and leads into the Calle di Rimedio, is a square door, surrounded by an architrave of red marble. 鈥 The wall in which this occurs has been restored; but passing beneath it, we enter a courtyard fenced from the Calle di Rimedio by a wall with parapets, and, on the other side by a most picturesque mass of buildings. The ground floor has been much altered, but three shafts are still left 鈥 which instead of carrying arches, as hitherto we have been accustomed to find them, sustain a massy horizontal wooden beam, on which rests the first floor of the house above 鈥 In the first storey above these shafts is a group of four windows sustained by three shafts and two pilasters. Both shafts and pilasters stand听without any base, on a low continuous plinth. 鈥 [Previously] the whole width of the house is considered as one arcade with intervals more or less wide. But [now] 鈥 the idea of the continuous arcade is lost. The groups of its arches contract themselves only [as]听windows; the cornice, as if unable to bear the contraction, snaps and remains only in fragments at the top of the narrow pilasters. The windows as they shrink in width, shrink in height also, draw up their feet, as it were, and instead of falling to the general foundation of the building, receive 鈥 a narrow plinth 鈥 for a foundation of their own. At the same time the great arch of the entrance sinks into a mere door, and the building,听instead of the appearance of a great court or public space surrounded by arcades, assumes that of a very closely veiled private house, with doors and windows of ordinary size.[30]

As the openings shrink and sink, a last echo of Byzantine arcaded feeling鈥攊n the now 鈥榗losely-veiled鈥 Gothic palace鈥攕urvives in the typically 鈥榗onnected group of central windows鈥 of their upper storeys. In the third volume of听The Stones of Venice, Ruskin sums up these great changes: 鈥榯he principal difference in general form and treatment between the Byzantine and Gothic palaces was the contraction of the marble facing into the narrow spaces between the windows, leaving large fields of brick wall perfectly bare鈥.[31]听Now, in these newly available wall planes, the 鈥榳hole wall of the palace was considered as the page of a book to be illuminated鈥.[32]听How the Venetians illuminated the pages offered by these large new surface fields can be seen in such late-fifteenth-century pictures of the city as Vittore Carpaccio鈥檚听Healing of the Possessed Man听(1494) or Giovanni Mansueti鈥檚听Miracle of the Relic of the Holy Cross in Campo San Lio听(1494),听 both in the Accademia Gallery, Venice (Fig.听5.2). Ruskin believed such paintings to be 鈥榯he perfectly true representation of what the Architecture of Venice was in her glorious time; trim, dainty,鈥攔ed and white like the blossom of a carnation,鈥攖ouched with gold like a peacock鈥檚 plume, and frescoed, even to its chimney pots, with fairest arabesque鈥.[33]听On the left of Mansueti鈥檚听Miracle, the illuminated urban wall veil recedes steeply, heads pop out to watch the events taking place below, and oriental textiles, hanging down from the windows, layer further arabesques. Here, says Ruskin, is 鈥榦ne harmony of work and life,鈥攁ll of a piece, you see them, in the wonderful palace-perspective on the left 鈥 with everybody looking out of their windows鈥.[34]听Enough traces of these polychromatic facades survive to prove that these Quattrocento artists were not painting fantasies, but the real city in front of them.[35]

Miracle of the Relic of the Holy Cross in Campo San Lio
Fig. 5.2 Giovanni Mansueti, Miracle of the Relic of the Holy Cross in Campo San Lio (1494). Tempera on canvas, 322 脳 463 cm. Gallerie dell鈥橝ccademia, Venice (cat. 564). Photo: 漏 G.A.VE Archivio fotografico鈥斺榮u concessione del Ministero dei beni e delle attivit脿 culturali e del turismo鈥擥allerie dell鈥橝ccademia di Venezia鈥.

In his studies of Italian Renaissance architecture of 1867, Jacob Burckhardt famously also called Venice the 鈥榗ity of incrustation鈥 for its commitment to 鈥榰ncompromising splendour鈥, as compared to Florence, 鈥榯he city of rustication鈥, reprising Ruskin鈥檚 characterisation of the city as a substance of brick overlaid with a wealth of colour and marble. The planar appearance of these architectural surfaces is reinforced by these platings of marble or the skins of colour overlaid on plaster.[36]听Certainly, Venice realises much of this wealth of colour, not in marble, but in humble paint on plaster, and Ruskin reads in the common chequer patterns (such as those visible in pink and white in Mansueti鈥檚听Miracle) the symbolic message of the 鈥榯rue chivalric and Gothic spirit鈥 of Christian service, where the diapers possibly echo the 鈥榪uarterings of the knights鈥 shields鈥.[37]听Again, it will be seen in Mansueti鈥檚 picture that the chequers are the 鈥grounds听of design rather than designs themselves鈥.[38]听They make an autonomous field in which windows and doors are cut irrespectively, and Ruskin is consequently critical of 鈥榤odern architects, in such minor imitations [of polychromy] as they are beginning to attempt鈥, in striving to dispose their patterns symmetrically in relation to the openings. Ruskin mourns 鈥榯hat the sea winds are bad librarians鈥 and virtually all these painted pages of chivalric spirit have perished. Yet the facade of the Ducal Palace still emblazons the chequered principle in its imperishable diaperings of Istrian stone and pink Verona marble, described by Paul Hills as a 鈥榲eil that disregards architectural members but begins and ends seemingly at random, like a cut from a huge roll of textile鈥.[39]听The Ducal Palace also encompasses the preceding narrative, in dramatically juxtaposing the Byzantine ethos of its arcaded sea storeys with the broad Gothic surfaces of its upper stage.

Linear and Surface Gothic. Line engraving
Fig. 5.3 R. P. Cuff after John Ruskin, Linear and Surface Gothic. Line engraving, reproduced in The Stones of Venice 2 (1853). Library Edition, Plate Twelve, facing 10.262.

To Ruskin鈥檚 vital contribution of the concept of the 鈥榳all veil鈥 to architectural language must be added his related concept of 鈥楽urface Gothic鈥. That planar quality, so conspicuous in the Gothic and early-Renaissance architecture of Venice, is part of a broader feeling for the wall plane in Italian building. A plate in the second volume of听Stones of Venice鈥攃omparing听Linear and Surface Gothic鈥攑uts a filigree Flamboyant canopy from Abbeville in northern France side by side with a sturdy one from a Scala tomb in Verona, northern Italy (Fig.听5.3). The Abbeville canopy 鈥榠s so cut through and through that it is hardly stronger than a piece of lace鈥, whereas the Verona canopy has 鈥榠ts surface of stone 鈥 unpierced, and the mass of it is thick and strong鈥. The latter attracts 鈥榯he eye to broad sculptured听surfaces, the other to involution of intricate听lines鈥.[40]听Accepting that both have their beauties, Ruskin insists the 鈥業talian [Surface] Gothic is the nobler style鈥. Something very similar to this linear/surface distinction had been expressed, before his detailed Venice research, in Ruskin鈥檚 鈥楾he Lamp of Power鈥 chapter of听The Seven Lamps of Architecture.听As Nature has 鈥榟er woods and thickets鈥 and 鈥榟er plains, and cliffs鈥, so 鈥榦f the many broad divisions under which architecture may be considered, none [are] more significant that those into buildings, whose interest is in their walls, and those whose interest is in the lines dividing their walls鈥.[41]听Ruskin鈥檚 instinct is to the sensual skins of wall architecture, seen frontally as face or figure: 鈥榃hatever infinity of fair form there may be in the maze of the forest, there is a fairer, as I think, in the surface of the quiet lake; and I hardly know that association of shaft or tracery, for which I would exchange the warm sleep of sunshine on some smooth, broad, human-like front of marble鈥.[42]

So, the question arises as to how this theory of the wall veil鈥攅laborated within the glowing cityscapes of Venice and Verona鈥攎ight be valid to the smoggy contexts of industrialising England. Notwithstanding Ruskin鈥檚 own broad contrast between a 鈥榮urface鈥 South, and a 鈥榣inear鈥 North, there听are听surface characteristics distinctive to the arts of the British Isles, as Nikolaus Pevsner notably elaborated in听The Englishness of English Art, based on his BBC Reith Lectures of 1955. Pevsner identifies an English 鈥榥ational mania for beautiful surface quality [as] of course an outcome of the national preference for the flat wall鈥 pointing to such examples of the 鈥榚nrichment 鈥 on the surface鈥 as the English Medieval affection for diapering, lierne vaults, and reticulated tracery.[43]听As postscript to these Medieval examples, Pevsner celebrates the design instincts of William Morris:

William Morris was destined to become the best designer of the nineteenth century in all Europe at least where flat surfaces are concerned 鈥μ. Because he was English and had grown up with a sensitive and intelligent appreciation of English traditions in design. Morris鈥檚 designs are paraphrase of natural growth. His observation of tree and flower was as close and intense as that of any English landscape painter. But his genius lies in the conversion of these observed data into perfectly fitting surface patterns.[44]

Here Pevsner suggests the ecological links Morris naturally makes to wider social and creative patterns; designs in which veil enclosures mediate between the room-as-garden, and the garden-as-outdoor-room. Thus, Morris鈥檚 intense observation of the earth veil translates into the enrichment of the wall veil.

 

鈥楾hink first of the walls鈥: Morris, Webb, and the Arts and Crafts surface

鈥榃hatever you have in your rooms think first of the walls, for they are that which makes your 鈥 home鈥, said William Morris. His utopian听News from Nowhere听(1892) opposes Victorian utilitarianism to present 鈥榯he spirit of the new days鈥 as a 鈥榙elight in the life of the world; intense and overweening love of the very skin and surface of the earth, on which man dwells鈥.[45]听He envisions architectural walls and surfaces equally expressive of the 鈥榞enerosity and abundance of life鈥. With Ruskin鈥檚 surface values and Gothic characteristics of 鈥楽acrifice鈥 and 鈥楻edundance鈥 in mind, the Gothic architecture in which Morris sought inspiration is generous, 鈥榠t is not ashamed of redundancy of material, or super-abundance of ornament, any more than nature is鈥.[46]听For Morris this passion for the living surface of the earth鈥擱uskin鈥檚 earth veil鈥攊s the first characteristic of Gothic art, the 鈥楲ove of Nature鈥; joined to this, as the second characteristic, is the epical, storytelling quality; and joined to both of these is the 鈥榦rnamental quality鈥. Morris sees the aspect that fuses the Gothic love of nature, storytelling, and ornament, as 鈥槼俪蟊鹛romantic听quality鈥, a quality that 鈥榠s rather to be felt than defined鈥.[47]听On the impact of this elusive atmosphere on a man of sensibility, but not a professional artist, May Morris (Morris鈥檚 daughter) quotes from Percy Lubbock鈥檚听Shades of Eton听(1929) on the 鈥榮trange new presence鈥 of a Morris interior, which 鈥榓llows you to work and live as usual, as before, but with romance: the breathable air鈥.[48]

Yet I agree with Nikolaus Pevsner that the raw red faces of local brickwork of Red House (Bexleyheath, London)鈥攄esigned by Philip Webb as Morris鈥檚 first home as a married man in 1858鈥9鈥攅vince little romance听in themselves. Pevsner鈥檚听Pioneers of Modern Design听(1936) admired Red House for this solidly unpretentious character, for its bare red-brick external surfaces unmasked by plaster, and for its one-room-and-a-corridor plan, bent into an L configuration of Ruskinian Changefulness.[49]听However, as will be seen, these hard red-brick planes and the open L plan are literally only half the intended story of Red House. And even in this original L Plan, Morris鈥檚 first biographer of 1899, J.听W. Mackail, confirms that while the 鈥榬ooms on both limbs of the house faced outward on to the garden鈥:

The two other sides of this half-quadrangle were masked by rose-trellises, enclosing a square inner court, in the middle of which rose the most striking architectural feature of the building, a well-house of brickwork and oak timber, with a steep conical tiled roof.[50]

Thus the limbs of the brick L-plan guarded an outdoor room, a听hortus conclusus听in its specific manifestation of 迟丑别听hortus ludi, a garden full of flowers as a setting for delight and courtly love.[51]听Known in the medieval sense as a 鈥榟erber鈥欌攆rom the Latin听herba听(grass or aromatic plant)鈥hortus ludi听refers to a small garden of delight, or an ornamental enclosed flowery mead set within a larger garden.[52]听Look at the Garden of Pleasure in the Flemish fifteenth-century听Roman de la Rose听manuscript beloved by Morris; a garden wherein courting and philosophising takes place around water fountains鈥攋ust like Webb鈥檚 Red House well鈥攚ithin frames of rose-grown trellises (Fig.听5.4).[53]听These trellises can be seen as precursors of Morris鈥檚 own trellis enclosures which inspired his first wallpaper design in 1862, and the many pleasure gardens described in Morris鈥檚 poem听The Earthly Paradise听(1868鈥70) (Fig.听5.5).[54]听Owing to Morris, the garden, in its relationship to the house, becomes more architectural, while the domestic interior grows more natural. In his lecture 鈥楳aking the Best of It鈥 (1879), Morris summed up the garden as a medieval paradise:

Large or small, [the garden] should look both orderly and rich. It should be well fenced from the outside world. It should by no means imitate either the wilfulness or the wildness of Nature, but should look like a thing never to be seen except near a house. It should in fact, look like a part of the house.[55]

Design for Trellis Wallpaper Morris and Webb
Fig. 5.4 William Morris and Philip Webb, Design for Trellis Wallpaper (1862). Pencil, ink, and watercolour on paper, 66.4 脳 61 cm. William Morris Gallery, Walthamstow, London. Photo: 漏 Paul Tucker for William Morris Gallery, Waltham Forest Council.
Guillaume de Loris and Jean de Meun, Roman de la Rose, 鈥楲utenist and singers in a walled garden鈥
Fig. 5.5 Guillaume de Loris and Jean de Meun, Roman de la Rose, 鈥楲utenist and singers in a walled garden鈥 (c.1490鈥1500). British Library, London (cat. Harley 4425 f12v). Photo: 漏 The British Library Board.

To reiterate, this outdoor 鈥榩leasure room鈥欌攎ade by the L-plan house and the rose trellis鈥攊s but only half of Red House鈥檚 narrative. Along with the contract drawings of Red House as built, the Victoria and Albert Museum has Webb鈥檚 1864 drawings for a scheme which would have expanded the L into a U-plan, allowing Edward Burne-Jones and his family to have joined the Morrises to make a complete 鈥楶alace of Art鈥. This project was abandoned in sad circumstances following the death of Edward and Georgiana Burne-Jones鈥檚 prematurely born second son in the very same year.

Webb鈥檚 design would have stitched the new wing into the eastern L of Red House, devising a new hipped roof porch on the north side to give the Burne-Joneses a separate entrance, in balance with the old. The great gable of a first-floor studio for Edward Burne-Jones marks out the east elevation. But the courtyard aspect is the most striking as shown in my perspective reconstruction, based on Webb鈥檚 plans and elevations. It skilfully responds to Red House鈥檚 original austerity while making richer new surfaces of its own (Fig.听5.6).[56]听The existing red brick continues听only听as a plinth, tying old and new together, and supports a jettied upper storey of half-timber and plaster, punctuated by a semi-circular bay window, which marks a pause to the new wing鈥檚 upper passage, on the cross axis of the well house. A bold timber and plaster cove crowns the half-timbering, as found in Kent鈥檚 medieval Wealden houses. Add in the tile-hanging to the south and east elevations and it will be seen that Webb鈥檚 design draws upon the full material palette of this southeastern region of England in all its potential of pattern and texture.

drawing of a house and a garden
Fig. 5.6 Stephen Kite, Perspective Reconstruction of Philip Webb鈥檚 1864 Design to Extend Red House into a 鈥楶alace of Art鈥. Photo: Stephen Kite.

Morris was a master in the layering principles of enriching a surface.[57]听As a friend and careful reader of Ruskin, Morris imbibed his principles of the architectonic subordination of ornament as laid out in the chapter on 鈥楾reatment of Ornament鈥 in the first volume of听The Stones of Venice. Here, Ruskin insists that painting and sculpture on a building should be 鈥fitted for its service鈥櫶and 鈥榓id [its] effect of every portion of the building over which it has influence鈥, that is to say, it should not stand out in听its own right听as might a framed picture or a freestanding statue.[58]听As fine examples of such subordination the reader should consider 鈥榯he effect of the illuminations of an old missal. In their bold rejection of all principles of perspective, light and shade, and drawing, they are infinitely more ornamental to the page, owing to the vivid opposition of their bright colours and quaint lines鈥.[59]听In their historical study of the ingredients and design concepts that made the enclosed garden of 迟丑别听hortus conclusus, Rob Aben and Saskia de Wit deconstruct such illuminations of 迟丑别听hortus ludi听as isotropic spaces wherein there is not 鈥榓 sense of alignment or a principal element to be discerned, let alone a link between ground plane, enclosure and built mass鈥.[60]听As compared to the hierarchical spaces of classical perspective, isotropic spaces are equally uniform in all directions. In my drawings analysing 迟丑别听Roman de la Rose听manuscript, the spatially layered garden components, shown on the left of the figure, are: wall and gate, flowery mead, fruit trees, fountain, and trellis enclosure (Fig.听5.7).[61]听Especially in its complete U-plan vision, Red House, as seen in the centre of Figure听5.7, romantically layers similar elements.

Hortus Conclusus analysis of Red House 鈥楶alace of Art鈥.
Fig. 5.7 Stephen Kite, Hortus Conclusus analysis of Red House 鈥楶alace of Art鈥. Photo: 漏 Stephen Kite.

The architectural coherence of Morris鈥檚 design stands out as an even greater achievement in the context of the disrupting forces of the time. In her book听From Ornament to Object听(2012) Alina Payne examines how鈥攆rom the nineteenth-century foregrounding of the anonymous crafts of the weaver, potter, and so forth鈥攐rnament slipped its architectural moorings and tectonic origins to migrate autonomously across the surfaces of walls, ceilings, and objects:

For Ruskin and Morris architectural ornament was the location of artistic expression for the craftsman. With this move they associated ornament with its anonymous artisan-maker and in so doing operated a similar dislocation that we find in Semper: artistic content moved from the monument and its genius artist to the humble object. 鈥 Since the architect does not directly handle the materials of his art, this also meant driving a wedge between architecture and ornament. The creative independence that Ruskin attributed to the artisan allowed architectural ornament to float away from architecture and be included in the domain of crafted things.[62]

Ironically, one consequence of Ruskin鈥檚 proposition that 鈥ornamentation is the principal part of architecture鈥櫶was to enable this autonomy to ornament.[63]听And, as we have also seen, medievalist romance inspired this new domain of craft. At the same time, it is Morris鈥檚 great accomplishment to contain these potentially dislocating forces鈥攖his 鈥榗entripetal diffusion of ornament away from its architectural core鈥 as Payne describes it鈥 within an听architectonic听unity wherein ornamental patterns both differentiate, and make assonance among the surfaces of wall, textile, paper, furniture, and carpet.[64]

An arresting example of this is how Red House鈥檚 architectural language also forms the setting in one of Morris鈥檚 pencil and ink studies for the painted doors of the St George Cabinet, designed by Philip Webb, for the 1862 International Exhibition (as indicated in the detail on the right of Figure 5.7).[65]听Morris illustrates soldiers leading away the anguished daughter of the king鈥攕he is intended to be the dragon鈥檚 next victim鈥攆rom before an arched doorway with a tympanum of herringbone brickwork; within the arch a sturdy planked door with wrought-iron strap hinges opens onto a darkly beamed and tiled passage drawn in shallow perspective; the distant building, locked into the compressed space above the daughter鈥檚 tresses, remarkably adumbrates the jettied half-timber and brick plinth of the 1864 extensions. Dante Gabriel Rossetti modelled for some of the figures on this cabinet, and his paintings similarly show the influence of the medieval missal, as Michaela Braesel has pointed out, 鈥榠n their use of a crowded picture plane, the diverse and dense ornamental areas, the slightly unclear spatial treatment within the paintings, the narrow and low spatial boxes鈥.[66]听His 1855 watercolour听Arthur鈥檚 Tomb, commissioned by Ruskin, is one of a remarkable and influential early series of watercolours; they are small, two-dimensional, and glowingly coloured with medieval romance (Fig.听5.8). The compressed space in this watercolour arranges the figures of Lancelot and Guenevere at their last meeting, the effigy and frieze of Arthur鈥檚 tomb itself, and the trunk of a tree whose canopying bower ambiguously elides fore-, middle-, and back-grounds into three, barely distinguishable layers. The tales of romance, and courtly love in Thomas Malory鈥檚听Le Morte d鈥橝rthur听(completed 1471) had become a cult in the second phase of the Pre-Raphaelite movement. Morris and Burne-Jones had discovered the book in around 1855 and it was the source for the Arthurian murals painted for the Oxford Union Society in 1857 by the group of seven artists gathered by Rossetti, including Morris and Burne-Jones.

Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Arthur鈥檚 Tomb (1855). Watercolour with bodycolour and graphite
Fig. 5.8 Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Arthur鈥檚 Tomb (1855). Watercolour with bodycolour and graphite, 24 脳 38.2 cm. British Museum, London. Photo: 漏 The Trustees of the British Museum.

Hermann Muthesius made Morris鈥檚 rule to 鈥榯hink first of the walls鈥 the epigraph to his chapter on the achievements of the English 鈥楥ontemporary Interior鈥 in his renowned praise of听The English House听(1904鈥5) of the period from 1860 to 1900. Expanding on the 鈥榗oncept of the wall鈥, Muthesius affirms:

The interior is a whole, the essence of which lies, in fact, in its totality, in its quality as space. In conceiving the interior as a work of art, therefore, the artist must first think of it as a space, that is, as the overall form and the interrelationship of the space-enclosing surfaces.[67]

For Muthesius these English interiors are generated from the 鈥榮pace-enclosing surfaces鈥, and he adds 鈥榳hen it comes to give the room artistic form the wall is the determining factor among the enclosing surfaces鈥. Many of these surface experiments were notably initiated in Red House, as we move from the outdoor room of its听hortus ludi听to the interior proper. Although the interior intentions were never to be fully realised, recent investigations of the drawing room of Red House, for example, have revealed (beneath later repainting) how much of the original polychromatic scheme was completed.[68]听Red House鈥檚 atmosphere can also be recovered from images of the later interior Morris created for the long drawing room in his home at Kelmscott House, Hammersmith. As biographer Mackail wrote:

The painted settle and cabinet, which were its chief ornaments, belonged to the earliest days of Red House; the rest of the furniture and decoration was all in the same spirit, and had all the effect of making the room a mass of subdued yet glowing colour, into which the eye sank with a sort of active sense of rest.[69]

Long Drawing Room at Kelmscott House. Woodcut
Fig. 5.9 F. H. New, Long Drawing Room at Kelmscott House . Woodcut, reproduced in J. W. Mackail, The Life of William Morris , two volumes [1899] (London: Longmans, Green, & Co., 1901), vol. 1, facing p. 372.

The layering principle of overlapping planes and patterns achieves this 鈥榓ctive sense of rest鈥, as shown on Mackail鈥檚 accompanying woodcut by F.听H. New (Fig.听5.9). In succession there are, first, the floral embossed and painted leather panels of Webb鈥檚 settle, then the dividing 鈥楶eacock and Dragon鈥 woollen curtains, drawn back to show the furthest plane of blue 鈥楤ird鈥 tapestry whose gentle folds background the whole room. At this endpoint a long sturdy table, draped in carpet, holds the space before a fireplace and between a pair of glazed, inbuilt cabinets. The lustre of pots and plates arranged here, and on the mantelpiece beyond, accent the visual field.[70]听Such an overlaid assemblage can be seen in the 鈥楤al d鈥橝rdents鈥 of Froissart鈥檚听Chronicles, a fifteenth-century illuminated Burgundian manuscript studied by Morris in the British Museum, here of gold vessels arrayed against a fabric of flowers on a red ground.[71]听The wall hangings depicted in Froissart also inspired a painted听simulation听of embroidered 鈥榳all hangings鈥 around the drawing room of Red House, where formalised plants bear a scroll on which is written: 鈥楺ui bien aime tard oublie鈥 (鈥榃ho loves well forgets slowly鈥).[72]

To understand the spatial layering of the Kelmscott drawing room, as applied to the flatness of wallpaper itself, we need look no further than Morris鈥檚 very first 鈥楾rellis鈥 wallpaper design of 1862. Again 迟丑别听hortus ludi听is the wellspring, if the 鈥楾rellis鈥 design is compared to the actual Red House garden trellis shown in Burne-Jones鈥檚听The Backgammon Players听(1862), a study for a painted cabinet panel inspired by Red House鈥檚 garden of delights.[73]听Georgina Burne-Jones recalled the herber of 鈥榯he well-court, of which two sides were formed by the house and the other two by a tall rose trellis. This little court with its beautiful high-roofed brick well in the centre summed up the feeling of the whole place鈥.[74]

Morris frankly accepted the 鈥榤echanical nature鈥 of wallpaper, recognising that it 鈥榟as to be painted flat on a wall鈥, but within this flatness he sought 鈥榯o mysteriously 鈥 interweave your sprays and stems鈥.[75]听Hence the shallow, three-layer space of 鈥楾rellis鈥, entwining foreground blossoms, the architectural trellis grid, and the flitting birds drawn by Webb. 鈥楾rellis鈥 is anticipated in the repeating rose-pattern decoration, made probably by Morris in the summer of 1860, to the wall area above the settle in Red House鈥檚 drawing room.[76] Already, here in 鈥楾rellis鈥 is Morris鈥檚 鈥榖ag of tricks鈥 as Ray Watkinson puts it: a constructing grid (disclosed or concealed), strong flowing lines on which to build interlocking colour masses of leaf and flower forms, with secondary accents of fauna or flora (Fig. 5.5).[77]听The measure of Morris鈥檚 achievement here can be seen if the architectural layering of 鈥楾rellis鈥 is compared to the eclectic mid-century papers popular with prosperous Victorian consumers 鈥榗ontaining highly naturalistic cabbage roses and other floral motifs鈥.[78]

Morris鈥檚 brief spell with the great George Edmund Street in 1856 proved pivotal. As Fiona MacCarthy suggests (1994), Morris was particularly influenced by Street鈥檚 two fundamental design principles: Street鈥檚 鈥榮ense of architecture as the centre and the ruling force of all design activity鈥 and 鈥榟is technique in creating grand effects from myriad components鈥. As she says, 鈥榓 Morris interior is a disciplined amalgam of patterns, colours, textures: wallpapers, friezes, curtain fabrics, wallhangings, painted ceilings,听layer upon layer鈥.[79]

鈥楽implicity or Splendour鈥: 1 Holland Park

So, on the one hand, there is the Morris of surfaces of whitewashed simplicity, the Morris who told his friend Edward Carpenter that although 鈥業 have spent 鈥 a vast amount of time designing furniture and wall-papers, carpets and curtains 鈥 after all I am inclined to think that sort of thing is mostly rubbish, and I would prefer for my part to live with the plainest whitewashed walls and wooden chairs and tables鈥.[80]听But as shown, even his own homes of Red House and Kelmscott House were a lot richer than this. For Walter Crane, the leading Aesthetic Movement decorator, 鈥榯he great advantage and charm of the Morrisian method is that it lends itself to either simplicity or splendour. You might be almost as plain as Thoreau, with a rush-bottomed chair; a piece of matting, an oaken trestle table; or you might have gold and lustre 鈥 jewelled light in the windows, and the walls hung with arras tapestry鈥.[81]

A corner of the second drawing-room, decorated by William Morris. Photograph
Fig. 5.10 Bernard Lemere, A corner of the second drawing-room, decorated by William Morris . Photograph, reproduced in The Art Journal (May 1893), p. 141.

Undeniable splendour characterises the spaces that Morris and Webb created for Alexander (Alecco) Ionides (1840鈥98), the Greek consul, at 1听Holland Park, London, working for almost a decade between 1879 and 1888. The house was badly damaged by bombing in the Second World War and demolished in 1953, but many key artefacts survive from this celebrated interior, which was also well documented in contemporary articles, such as 鈥楢 Kensington Interior鈥 by Lewis F. Day in听The Art Journal听of May 1893, finely illustrated with photographs by Harry Bedford Lemere. Take just one moment within its sumptuous sequence of spaces鈥攐ne illustrated in听The Art Journal听by the Lemere photograph听A corner of the second drawing-room, decorated by William Morris鈥攖o absorb the intense cumulative layering of 鈥楩lower Garden鈥 woven silk wall covering, curtain fabric, pictures such as Burne-Jones鈥檚听Pan and Psyche听(1872鈥4), and Iznik tiles, radiating out into the object surfaces of the piano case and the Hammersmith carpet (Fig.听5.10).[82]听In听TheArt Journal, Lewis F. Day emphasises the prevailing tonal harmony of this abundance:

The walls 鈥 are hung with a sober textile material, in which the pattern merges itself into a general tint of greenish or greyish blue, according to the angle at which the light happens to fall upon it; the window curtains are of the same, and the woodwork is painted a quiet green, which is really a lower tone of the prevailing tint.[83]

Writing in听The Studio听(1898) on 鈥楢n Epoch-Making House鈥, Gleeson White found the 鈥榮ecret鈥 of 1听Holland Park to lie in the 鈥榬ich mellow 鈥渂loom鈥濃 produced by such 鈥榟armonies of colour鈥 as those greenish-greyish blues of the drawing room.[84]听Writing as a colourist, by 鈥榖loom鈥 Gleeson White meant those harmonies of colour that might be enjoyed in a fine old silk rug; comparable tones orchestrated the interior as a whole, and these resonant 鈥榖looms鈥 of colour harmony deepened the atmosphere of the dwelling as a natural romance retreat.

Such pleasance gardens鈥攖he aforementioned herbers or听hortus ludi鈥often appear as romance settings in Morris鈥檚 epic poem听The Earthly Paradise, as in 鈥楾he Watching of the Falcon鈥 where Morris describes a 鈥榳alled pleasance, / With walks and sward fit for the dance / Of Arthur鈥檚 court in its best time鈥 where 鈥榳ithin the bounds of that sweet close / Was trellised the bewildering rose; / There was the lily over-sweet, / And starry pinks for garlands meet; / And apricots hung on the wall鈥. The Prologue to听The Earthly Paradise听is an ecologist鈥檚 cri-de-coeur against pollution: 鈥楩orget six counties overhung with smoke / Forget the snorting steam and piston stroke / Forget the spreading of the hideous town / Think rather of the packhorse on the down / And dream of London, small, and white, and clean鈥. In truth, just beyond those resonant paradisical wall veils lay the murky, polluted London skies described by Henry James as 鈥榩erpetually instained with a sort of dirty fog-paste, like Thames-mud in solution鈥.[85]听James had to light his candles by eleven o鈥檆lock in the morning to read, and artists in the Holland Park circles, patronised by the Ionides clan, complained that it was often too sootily dark on a winter鈥檚 day to attempt painting.

I have described what would have been the fullest attainment of the medieval pleasance of 迟丑别听hortus ludi, Red House鈥檚 unrealised 鈥楶alace of Art鈥 project. In 迟丑别听hortus conclusus听of this outdoor room, the primary 鈥榣ove of the very skin and surface of the earth鈥欌擱uskin鈥檚 earth veil鈥攖ransmutes to wall veils, designed architectonically as spatially shallow layers, akin to those in the illuminated medieval missals beloved by Ruskin and Morris. Morris鈥檚 injunction to 鈥榯hink first of the walls鈥 has been seen to be founded on a 鈥榬evival of Gothic architecture鈥, which 鈥榟as walls that it is not ashamed of鈥, underpinned by Ruskin鈥檚 readings of the missal and the surface values of the Gothic wall veil. Morris and Webb engendered environments of romance in hierarchies of surface scaled to simplicity or splendour. From the complex harmonies of 1听Holland Park to the relative simplicity of Red House and Kelmscott House, beauty should become鈥攊n Morris鈥檚 socialist ideal鈥攁 taken-for-granted backdrop to life for all. Wall veils are to remind us of the biosphere and the 鈥榦utward face of the earth鈥, and to evoke romance in what鈥攊n a sustainable ecosystem鈥攕hould be 鈥榯he breathable air鈥.

Citations

[1]听Ruskin, 7.14 (Modern Painters听1, 1843).
[2]听William Morris,听News from Nowhere听[1892] (London: Thames and Hudson, 2017), pp.听189鈥90.
[3]听Ruskin, 9.75 (The Stones of Venice听1, 1851).
[4]听Ruskin, 24.203鈥4 (St Mark鈥檚 Rest, 1877).
[5]听Ruskin, 24.241.
[6]听Ruskin, 24.263.
[7]听William Shakespeare,听Henry VI, Part 3听[1591], Act 3, Scene 2, in听William Shakespeare:听Complete Works, Jonathan Bate and Eric Rasmussen (eds.) (The Royal Shakespeare Company: London, 2007), p.听1269.
[8]听Charles L. Eastlake,听History of the Gothic Revival听[1872] (Leicester: Leicester University Press, 1978), p.听278.
[9]听Ruskin, 10.269 (The Stones of Venice听2, 1853); See also Stephen Kite, 鈥楤uilding Texts and Reading Fabrics鈥,听Library Trends, 61:2 (2012): pp.听418鈥39.
[10]听See Stephen Kite,听Building Ruskin鈥檚 Italy: Watching Architecture听(Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, 2012).
[11]听Elizabeth K. Helsinger,听Ruskin and the Art of the Beholder听(Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 1982), p.听212.
[12]听Ruskin, 11.182鈥3 (The Stones of Venice听3, 1853).
[13]听Ruskin, 8.234 (The Seven Lampsof Architecture, 1849).
[14]听Ruskin, 11.38, 41.
[15]听Ruskin, 11.41. George Landow,听The Aesthetic and Critical Theories of John Ruskin听(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1971), chapters 4 and 5.
[16]听Quoted in Adrian Forty,听Words and Buildings: a vocabulary of modern architecture听(London: Thames and Hudson), p.听72.
[17]听Ruskin, 36.212 (鈥楲etter to F. J. Furnivall鈥, 22 May 1855).
[18]听Michael W. Brooks,听John Ruskin and Victorian Architecture听(London: Thames and Hudson, 1989), p.听88.
[19]听Eastlake,听History of the Gothic Revival, p.听278.
[20]听Ruskin, 9.75 (The Stones of Venice听1, 1851).
[21]听Anuradha Chatterjee,听John Ruskin and the Fabric of Architecture听(Abingdon: Routledge, 2018) richly expands on these fabric and dress themes.
[22]听Semper quoted in David Leatherbarrow and Mohsen Mostafavi,听Surface Architecture听(Cambridge MA: MIT Press, 2002), p.听91.
[23]听Ruskin, 9.351, my emphasis.
[24]听Deborah Howard,听The Architectural History of Venice听(New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2002), p.听34.
[25]听Ruskin, 10.276 (The Stones of Venice听2, 1853).
[26]听Ruskin, 10.212. On Ruskin鈥檚 active prose see Michael Brooks, 鈥楧escribing Buildings: John Ruskin and Nineteenth-Century Architectural Prose鈥,听Prose Studies听3 (1980): pp.听241鈥53.
[27]听Juergen Schulz,听The New Palaces of Medieval Venice听(University Park PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2004), chapter听1, figs.听20, 21. See also Paolo Maretto,听La Casa Veneziana听(Venezia: Marsilio Editori, 1986), pp.听66鈥70, fig.听33; Edoardo Arslan,听Gothic Architecture in Venice, (trans.) Anne Engel (London: Phaidon, 1971), pp.听30鈥1.
[28]听Ruskin, 10.295.
[29]听Brooks, 鈥楧escribing Buildings鈥, p.听245.
[30]听Ruskin, 10.275鈥6, note 1, my emphasis to last sentence. There are also field notes and details in Ruskin鈥檚听Venice-Notebook 鈥楬ouse Book 1鈥: 鈥楬ouse No 43. very interesting in a courtyard in the Calle del Rimedio鈥. He notes the 鈥榦ld wooden bracketed beam鈥 (p.听52) and draws its capitals on the opposite page, and the 鈥4 at[tached arches] of 2nd. [order] on a long plinth鈥. On the following page he records: 鈥業 got up to its second story and marked the section and angle leaf of this capital which are important thus鈥擳he shafts stand on this plinth. and I think always have stood without any base鈥, 鈥楻uskin Library and Research Centre / Venetian Notebooks Electronic Edition鈥, accessed February 2018,.
[31]听Ruskin, 11.22鈥3 (The Stones of Venice听3, 1853). On Ruskin and brickwork, see also Stephen Kite, 鈥楾he Bricks of Venice: material and craft in John Ruskin鈥檚 political economy鈥, in Juliet Odgers, Mhairi McVicar, and Stephen Kite (eds.),听Economy and Architecture听(Abingdon: Routledge, 2015).
[32]听Ruskin, 11.27.
[33]听Ruskin, 24.163 (Guide to the Principle Pictures in The Academy of Fine Arts at Venice, 1877).
[34]听Ruskin, 24.163.
[35]听Manfred Schuller, 鈥楲e facciate dei palazzo medioevali di Venezia. Ricerche su singoli esempi architettonici鈥, in Francesco Valcanover and Wolfgang Wolters (eds.),听L鈥橝rchitettura Gotica Veneziana听(Venice: Instituto Veneto di Scienze, Letteri ed Arti, 2000), p.听338.
[36]听Jacob Burckhardt,听The Architecture of the Italian Renaissance听[1867], (trans.) James Palmes, (ed.) Peter Murray (Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1987), p.听46; Ruskin, 9.323 (The Stones of Venice听1, 1851); See also Paul Hills,听Venetian Colour: Marble, Mosaic, Painting and Glass 1250鈥1550听(New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1999), p.听12.
[37]听Ruskin, 11.23 (The Stones of Venice听3, 1853).
[38]听Ruskin, 11.28.
[39]听Hills,听Venetian Colour, pp.听66鈥7.
[40]听Ruskin, 10.264 (The Stones of Venice听2, 1853).
[41]听Ruskin, 8.108 (The Seven Lampsof Architecture, 1849).
[42]听Ruskin, 8.109.
[43]听Nikolaus Pevsner,听The Englishness of English Art听[1956] (Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin Books, 1964), p.听105.
[44]听Pevsner,听The Englishness of English Art, p.听107.
[45]听Morris,听News from Nowhere, pp.听189鈥90.
[46]听William Morris, 鈥楪othic Architecture鈥, in May Morris,听The Art of William Morris: Morris as a Writer听[1936], vol.听1 of May Morris,听William Morris, Artist, Writer, Socialist,听two volumes (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012), p.听275.
[47]听William Morris, 鈥楢ddress on the collection of paintings of the English Pre-Raphaelite school in the City of Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery on Friday, October 24, 1891鈥, in Morris,听The Art of William Morris, pp.听302鈥3.
[48]听Percy Lubbock,听Shades of Eton听[1929] (London: Jonathan Cape, 1932), pp.听93鈥4. See also May Morris,听The Art of William Morris, pp.听38鈥9.
[49]听Nikolaus Pevsner,听Pioneers of Modern Design: from William Morris to Walter Gropius听[1936] (London: Pelican Books, 1960), pp.听58鈥9; see for example, Peter Davey,听Arts and Crafts Architecture听(London: Phaidon, 1995), pp.听39鈥40. See also Nicholas Cooper, 鈥楻ed House: Some Architectural Histories鈥,听Architectural History听49 (2006): pp.听207鈥21.
[50]听J. W. Mackail,听The Life of William Morris听[1899], two volumes (London: Longmans, Green, 1901), vol.听1, p.听142.
[51]听See Rob Aben and Sakia de Wit,听The Enclosed Garden: History and Development of the Hortus Conclusus and its Reintroduction into the Present-day Urban Landscape听(Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 2001), pp.听37鈥40.
[52]听Aben and de Wit,听The Enclosed Garden, p.听247; see also Tessa Wild,听William Morris and the Palace of Art听(London: Philip Wilson, 2018), p.听201.
[53]听British Library, Harley MS 4425; acquired by the nation in 1753 under the Act of Parliament that established the British Museum, and one of the foundation collections of the British Library. See also Fiona MacCarthy,听The Last Pre-Raphaelite: Edward Burne-Jones and the Victorian Imagination听(London: Faber and Faber, 2012), p.听151.
[54]听Morris, 鈥楾he Man Born to Be King: The Medieval Tale for March鈥, in听The Earthly Paradise听(Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1868), vol.听1, lines 1660颅鈥撀88, 1890颅鈥3.
[55]听William Morris, 鈥楳aking the Best of It鈥 (a paper read before the Trades鈥 Guild of Learning and the Birmingham Society of Artists, 1879), in William Morris,听Hopes and Fears for Art: Five lectures delivered in Birmingham, London, and Nottingham, 1878鈥1881听(London: Ellis and White, 1882), p.听128.
[56]听Peter Blundell-Jones, 鈥楻ed House鈥,听Architects鈥 Journal听183:3 (15 January 1986): p.听47.
[57]听See for example, Ray Watkinson,听Morris as Designer听(London: Studio Vista, 1967), p.听42.
[58]听Ruskin, 9.284鈥5 (The Stones of Venice听1, 1851), Ruskin鈥檚 emphasis.
[59]听Ruskin, 9.285. See also Michaela Braesel, 鈥楾he Influence of Medieval Illuminated Manuscripts on the Pre-Raphaelites and the Early Poetry of William Morris鈥,听Journal of William Morris Studies听15:4 (2004):听p.听41.
[60]听Aben and de Wit,听Enclosed Garden, p.听44.
[61]听See related manuscript analysis diagram in Aben and de Wit,听Enclosed Garden, p.听43.
[62]听Alina Payne,听Ornament to Object: Genealogies of Architectural Modernism听(New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2012), p.听89.
[63]听Ruskin, 12.83 (Lectures on Architecture and Painting,听1854), Ruskin鈥檚 emphasis.
[64]听Payne,听Ornament to Object, p.听90.
[65]听Linda Parry (ed.),听William Morris, exhibition catalogue, Victoria and Albert Museum (London: Philip Wilson, V&A Publishing, 1996), p.听172.
[66]听Braesel, 鈥楳edieval Illuminated Manuscripts鈥, p.听41.
[67]听Hermann Muthesius,听The English House, three volumes [Das Englische Haus, 1904颅鈥5)], (trans.) Janet Seligman and Stewart Spencer, (ed.) Dennis Sharp 听(London: Frances Lincoln, 2007), vol.听3, p.听89.
[68]听See Wild,听Morris and his Palace of Art, pp.听119颅颅鈥25.
[69]听Mackail,听Life of William Morris, vol.听1, pp.听372鈥3.
[70]听Linda Parry,听William Morris Textiles听(London: V&A Publishing, 2013), p.听185; and Imogen Hart, 鈥楢n 鈥淓nchanted鈥 Interior: William Morris at Kelmscott House鈥, in Jason Edwards and Imogen Hart (eds.),听Rethinking the Interior, c.1867鈥1896: Aestheticism and Arts and Crafts听(Farnham: Ashgate, 2010).
[71]听See Caroline Arscott,听William Morris and Edward Burne-Jones: Interlacings听(New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2008), pp.听88鈥9.
[72]听Wild,听Morris and his Palace of Art, pp.听119颅鈥28.
[73]听See Charlotte Gere,听Artistic Circles: Design and Decoration in the Aesthetic Movement听(London: V&A Publishing, 2010), pp.听161鈥2.
[74]听Georgina Burne-Jones, quoted in Wild,听Morris and his Palace of Art, p.听205.
[75]听William Morris, 鈥楾he Lesser Arts of Life鈥 [1878], in William Morris,听Architecture, Industry and Wealth听(London: Longmans, Green, 1902), p.听68.
[76]听See Wild,听Morris and his Palace of Art, p.听145.
[77]听Watkinson,听Morris as Designer, p.听52.
[78]听Joanna Banham, 鈥楾he English Response: Mechanization and Design Reform鈥, in Lesley Hoskins (ed.),听The Papered Wall: The History, Patterns and Techniques of Wallpaper听(London: Thames and Hudson, 2005), pp.听138鈥9, see for example fig. 186, 鈥楩loral pattern by William Woollams & Co., block-printed in colours, 1849鈥.
[79]听Fiona MacCarthy,听William Morris: A Life for our Time听(London: Faber and Faber, 1995), p.听107, my emphasis.
[80]听Quoted in Hart, 鈥楢n 鈥淓nchanted鈥 Interior鈥, p.听79.
[81]听Quoted in Gere,听Artistic Circles, p.听165.
[82]听Lewis F. Day, 鈥楢 Kensington Interior鈥,听The Art Journal听(May 1893): p. 141.
[83]听Day, 鈥楰ensington Interior鈥, p.听141.
[84]听Gleeson White, 鈥楢n Epoch Making House鈥,听The Studio听14 (1898): p.听111.
[85]听Henry James, quoted in Caroline Dakers,听The Holland Park Circle: Artists and Victorian Society听(New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1999), p.听238.

DOI: 10.33999/2021.61

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