Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

Studio: international art — 57.1913

DOI issue:
No. 238 (January 1913)
DOI article:
The Arts and Crafts Society's exhibition at the Grosvenor Gallery, [1]
DOI Page / Citation link: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.21158#0324

DWork-Logo
Overview
loading ...
Facsimile
0.5
1 cm
facsimile
Scroll
OCR fulltext
The Arts and Crafts Society's Exhibition








j

a


fn

»?rl


•.—1

1

CUPBOARD IN VERNIE I’OLIE (SHOWN OPEN AND CLOSED)

(Lent by Miss Gundrea Trotter)

BY MRS. ALYS TROTTER

contributed work in metal and wood on the last
occasion, sends nothing this time.

The large gallery at the Arts and Crafts Exhibi-
tion suffers from a superfluity of designs for stained
glass. Some of these, however, are very good, and
among the best are the cartoons for a window in
Abbotsbury Church designed by Mr. Robert
Anning Bell.

There is only one contribution from the firm
founded by William Morris but it ranks with the
finest things in the exhibition. It is a large panel
of Arras tapestry designed by Mrs. Adrian Stokes
and executed by Mr. B. J. Martin. Some good
302

tapestry of a more modest kind is shown by Mr.
Edmund Hunter. Mrs. M. Dibdin Spooner’s
unfinished panels for the altar-piece of St.
Christopher’s Church, Haslemere, are notable for
the individuality of the heads in the designs.
They look like portraits and are in any case a
welcome departure from the conventionality of the
heads in the ordinary church picture.

In the next article reference will be made to the
other classes of work on view at the Arts and
Crafts Exhibition, such as pottery, glass, metal-
work, &c., and a further series of illustrations will
be given. \v. T. Whitley.
 
Annotationen