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Arts & Crafts Rugs:
 
 
Style: Botanical
Predominant Color: green Predominant Color: green

The Arts & Crafts movement in England was initiated by William Morris during the 1870s. The influence of his designs rapidly spread across Europe and North America and played a key role in shaping the creative life of Great Britain. The distinctive style of antique Arts & Crafts carpets and rugs are defined and characterized by serpentine curvilinear and naturalistic floral patterns executed in a rich, dense palette. Rebelling against their rigid Victorian backgrounds, and the dehumanizing mechanization of the Industrial Age, proponents of the Arts & Crafts movement sought to re-establish the link between the artist and the craftsman, and art and industry. Adhering to the principals of the Arts & Crafts movement, the work of these artisans ranges in style from the Persian-inspired to the proto-modernist. The Hammersmith carpets of the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century epitomize the golden age of British carpet weaving and Arts & Crafts rug weaving in general.

An Arts & Craft Voysey carpet BB4307

Circa: 1920
 
An early 20th century Arts & Crafts "Donnemara" rug by Charles Francis Annesley Voysey with a bold vinery, tulip, and half blown rose design overall within an eggplant vinery border. Born in England, C.F.A. Voysey was a leader of the Arts and Crafts movement, who had a great influence on his contemporaries. Early in his career as a designer and architect, Voysey primarily designed textiles and wallpaper Among the retailers and manufacturers of his rug designs were Morton's (Donegal rugs), Tomkinson and Adam, Yates & Co., and Heal's department store

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Size:  11'3" × 11'5"
Item No:  BB4307