AN ENGLISH CREAM LINEN AND SILK DAMASK TABLECLOTH
WALTER CRANE - THE SENSES TABLECLOTH
AN ENGLISH CREAM LINEN AND SILK DAMASK TABLECLOTH

DESIGNED BY WALTER CRANE, CIRCA 1895

细节
AN ENGLISH CREAM LINEN AND SILK DAMASK TABLECLOTH
DESIGNED BY WALTER CRANE, CIRCA 1895
Woven with an allegory of the five senses in the centre, the border with animals including satyrs, deer and boar, entwined with oak leaves and acorns, the corners with scallops flanked by dolphins, woven inscriptions 'SEE, HEAR, SMELL, TASTE, TOUCH', and 'REGD', together with eleven napkins

330 x 91 in. (838 x 231 cm.), the tablecloth;
29 ¾ x 26 ½ in. (75.5 x 67 cm.), the napkins




来源
Clive and Alicia Pearson, Parham Park, Sussex, sold Christie's, London, 13 May 1996, lot 952.

拍品专文

Walter Crane (1845-1915) was a prolific painter, book illustrator and writer. He participated in the first exhibition for the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society in 1888 and was appointed Principal of The Royal Collage of Art. Although he designed for various media including textiles, ceramics and wallpapers, Crane referred to textiles as 'the most intimate of the arts of design' due to their association with everyday life (G. Smith and S. Hyde, Walter Crane, 1845-1915: Artist, Designer, and Socialist, 1989, p. 124).
The design for the present tablecloth was created by Crane circa 1893 - 1900 and was manufactured by John Wilson & Son. It was reportedly the most widely illustrated item of the 1893 Arts & Crafts Exhibition and the most popular of the modern damask designs Wilson and Co. produced (ibid.). A comparable cloth is in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London ( T.450-1976 ). Crane also designed costumes for the 'Dance of the Five Senses' made for the masque 'Beauty's Awakening', performed by the Art Worker's Guild at the Guildhall, London, June 29th, 1899.

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