Showing posts with label Red House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Red House. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 August 2014

William Morris' Red House revisited

A couple of years ago I visited Red House,William Morris' Arts and Crafts home built in 1859. It was commissioned and lived in by William Morris and was a haven at the weekends for his visiting Pre Raphaelite brothers including Rossetti and Burne-Jones. If you would like to read about my first visit there is a link to it here. Last week I revisited it with my Mum and Dad.
The house has a very gothic feel.
In it's time it was in the middle of fields but now it is in busy suburbia. It really is still a haven though in such a busy spot and so quiet.

The gardens are tranquil and even have bee hives
I loved this gorgeous rose
and this rose trellis.


The National Trust now owns the property and since our last visit the house and grounds have been further improved and other treasures discovered. It was described by Burne-Jones as " The beutifullest place on earth"(stet) and is a real gem.
We took a guided tour. The staircase is original and solid oak.

They literally decorated everything with their art
I love this unfinished piece
This amazing fireplace has the Latin quote "Ars longa vita brevis" which translates as art is long, life is short. What a legacy they left us.



Below is the very window at which Morris sat at looking down into his garden where he got so much of his inspiration. There are a few original wood cut blocks on show in his studio. 

There are also samples of some of his famous designs. Below is one of my favourites and I decided to use it as my inspiration for today's creation. I decided to make a Moment for my Journal.
I wanted to combine a few challenges so I used several techniques. The colours and techniques I used are those in a Craft Stamper Masterclass piece in the March edition by Anna-Karin Evaldsson called creating texture; pages 69-73 .I thought the colours used were gorgeous so out came my mustard seed and salty ocean DIs. I used the wrinkle free technique and loved the way they combined to make the green.
 I did some partial stamping with some Crafty Individuals floral stamps
 I also used my Visible Image rose stamp which I painted with distress inks and then fussy cut out. I also  used the wonderful Bronte verse from Visible Image to stamp and then embossed it in white 

I also added some crackle paint to a trellis die cut to give the impression of the thorny stalk.
 Next out came my Grunge paste which I added some blue acrylic to for colour and used a floral stencil to add textured flowers.

So here is my finished Moment.
 Here are a few close ups showing the extra elements I added. The leaves are Cheery Lynn which I die cut from hand inked card and edged with vintage postcard DI.

I used the Latin quote from the top of the fireplace in Red House.




I would like to enter my Moment into the following Challenges;

Art Stamper Magazine Take it make it, any technique from 2014. Mine is the March Masterclass; creating texture by Anna-Karin Evaldsson
Our creative corner summertime
Country View Crafts word play
Visible Image anything goes
Natalie and Amy die cuts and flowers
A creative romance fun in the sun
Fussy and fancy words
Totally gorjuss floral
Cheery Lynn anything goes
The artistic stamper anything goes
Stamp and create anything goes
Bearly Mine anything goes

How wonderful that the William Morris and the Pre Raphaelite brothers have left such a legacy...the Arts and Crafts movement really did change art.

It's the last few days of my 4th Bloggerversary anniversary giveaway. All the details are at the top of my side bar and the link is here  Everyone is welcome. Life has been incredibly busy this end so apologies for my lack of commenting. Good luck everyone and I will be sometime  next week with the winners.

Inspiration really is all around us...keep creating, keep enjoying life.

Back soon,

Bye for now,

Jane x

Sunday, 14 August 2011

Red House, blue blog

I don't know if any of you will notice but I have had a play around with the design of my blog. When I started writing Jane's Journal, over a year ago now, I just used the default blogger design. I thought I would now spice this up a little. I have added the photo I took at St. Pancras of "Brief Encounter", the huge bronze sculpture on the platform, before we boarded the Eurostar to Paris recently.I really love that photo and has some great memories attached to it for me.  I also changed the background to a blue background. I find that far more relaxing. I'm afraid I am not computer savvy enough to do anything too clever and I do admire how wonderful some of your blogs look but I personally like my new look. I hope you do too?

As promised  I am back with a post from my recent trip to Red House, where William Morris lived and the Arts and Crafts movement was born. This National Trust owned property is in the most unlikely area of Bexleyheath, a fairly unglamorous part of South East London. Of course when it was built in 1860 it was out in the open countryside far, far away from the noise of London. There is a large brick wall surrounding this gem of a building, the only give away of what lay inside was a plaque....shown below.


Red House is a relatively small property, by National Trust standards. It is only open a few days a week and can only be viewed by booking a guided tour. These tours only take a dozen or so people around,so it really feels like an intimate visit.

William Morris was a very rich man; he inherited a vast sum of  money and a copper mine from his father. He decided to build Red House as a place where he and his fellow artists and poet friends, the Pre Raphaelite brothers, could gather and try out their new ideas. He bought an orchard in Bexleyheath and together with Philip Webb tried to bring his medieval/Gothic architectural ideas to life by designing and having built Red House.
Rossetti and Burne-Jones were just two of the artists who shared his home with him for some years.





As we walked through the gate we saw the building
for the first time.












It does have a Gothic feel to it and although the original gardens have long disappeared there are still plenty of the old apple tress from the original orchard. The guide told us that when the house was first built you could open any window and pick an apple!






Even the huge front door has a lock  mechanism that Morris asked his architect to mimic a medieval lock. He really was obsessed with all things medieval.
Just imagine how many now world famous artists and poets passed through this door in its time....I wonder if there were aware just how powerful their influence on art would be?





Once inside we found ourselves in a small hallway where immediately we were able to see evidence of some wonderful stained glass work by Burne-Jones. The windows had images of Faith and Love.










The details on the glass were quite exquisite.
















Also further into the hallway was a dresser with half finished paintings showing Morris and his friends with their wives/girlfriends. Don't ask about relationships...it was very much who was sleeping with who. It turns out that Morris's wife, Jane actually despised him!










Once inside we were also able to see the huge front door again with its ornate glass

We also found out that Morris insisted, despite having a dining room, that they all ate in the hall just as people did in Medieval times. He really was quite eccentric! He also had a fear of contained spaces so there are no normal ceilings anywhere in the house, every room goes up into a lofty space.

The National Trust only has a few rooms open to the public but those we saw were spectacular.



This wonderful embroidered piece was one of 12 that Morris had planned to use to make a huge tapestry wall hanging but only this one was ever finished. It was never even cut off the backing material and you could see little tiny practice stitching and even sketching on the fabric. You can see these in the next close up photo.














One very interesting fact I learnt is that Morris was not actually an artist himself. He was a designer and did not paint. If he had a design someone else would paint it for him.  He did though stitch this wonderful piece together with one of the artist's wives.
















This was the library, look at the tall strange ceiling! Apparently this also made the house very cold.









More wonderful stained glass

Also on show were some of the original blocks used to make the famous wall paper patterns known by us all.
After coming back down stairs we took a tour around the garden. As I said earlier, these are not original but were still very pretty.

I really did enjoy walking in the steps of a band of "Brothers" who influenced the artistic world both during their lifetime and now.
If you ever get a chance to visit this little National Trust gem, do!


I hope  your are enjoying a wonderful weekend? It's not been the sunniest week here but it is still pleasantly warm. I am off to see THE DRESS on Thursday, I am so looking forward to it. Thanks for visiting my corner of the world and I  hope to see you here again next week.

Bye for now,

Jane x