William Morris Gallery

After walking in Epping Forest, we stopped off at the William Morris Gallery, which occupies Water House, the third house that Morris lived in in Walthamstow, after being born in Elm House in 1834, then moving to Woodford Hall in 1840, and to Elm House in 1847, following the death of his father.   I hadn’t been there since the exceptionally intelligent redisplay by Pringle, Richards, and Sharratt, which – deservedly – won Museum of the Year Award.   This was a detail of the wood carving on a Morris and Company bench:-

image

A detail of his sample books:-

image

Some embroidered slippers which he bought on his trip to Iceland:-

image

A piece of Morris and Company stained glass:-

image

And the cover of May Morris’s book about needlework:-

image

Standard

3 thoughts on “William Morris Gallery

  1. As always your attention to detail is a delight but those who haven’t visited should do so as there is so much here : his best wallpapers, and the blocks from which they were printed; tapestries, such as the WOODPECKER; tiles, ceramics, metalwork; and much by those who he influenced (Voysey, Burges, Gimson, Brangwyn). Or read Fiona MacCarthy’s great biography : WILLIAM MORRIS : a life for our times.