An Address Delivered
Before the Trades' Guild of Learning (Dec. 4, 1877),
by William Morris, originally published in London: Ellis and White, 29
New Bond Street.
THE
DECORATIVE ARTS.
Hereafter I hope in
another lecture to have the pleasure of laying before you an historical
survey of the Decorative Arts, and I must confess it would have been pleasanter
to me to have begun my talk with you by entering at once upon the subject
of the history of this great industry; but, as I have something to say
in a third lecture about various matters connected with the practice of
Decoration among ourselves in these days, I feel that I should be in a
false position before you, and one that might lead to confusion, or overmuch
explanation, if I did not let you know what I think on the nature and
scope of these arts, on their condition at the present time, and their
outlook in times to come. In doing this it is like enough that I shall
say things with which you will very much disagree; I must ask you therefore
from the outset to believe that, whatever I may blame, or whatever I may
praise, I neither, when I think of what history has been, am inclined
to lament the past, to despise the present, or despair of the future;
that I believe all the change and stir about us is a sign of the world's
life, and that it will lead - by ways, indeed, of which we have no guess
- to the bettering of all mankind.
Now as to the scope
and nature of these Decorative Arts I have to say, that though when I
come more into the details of my subject I shall not meddle much with
the great art of Architecture, and less still with the great arts commonly
called Sculpture and Painting, yet I cannot in my own mind quite sever
them from those lesser, so-called Decorative Arts, which I have to speak
about: it is only in latter times, and under the most intricate conditions
of life, that they have fallen apart from one another; and I hold that,
when they are so parted, it is ill for the Arts altogether: the lesser
ones become trivial, mechanical, unintelligent, incapable of resisting
the changes pressed upon them by fashion or dishonesty; while the greater,
however they may be practised for a while by men of great minds and wonder-working
hands, unhelped by the lesser, unhelped by each other, are sure to lose
their dignity of popular arts, and become nothing but dull adjuncts to
unmeaning pomp, or ingenious toys for a few rich and idle men.
However, I have not
undertaken to talk to you of Architecture, Sculpture, and Painting, in
the narrower sense of those words, since, most unhappily as I think, these
master-arts, these arts more specially of the intellect, are at the present
day divorced from decoration in its narrower sense. Our subject is that
great body of art, by means of which men have at all times more or less
striven to beautify the familiar matters of everyday life: a wide subject,
a great industry; but a great part of the history of the world, and a
most instrument to the study of that history.
A very great industry
indeed, comprising the trades of house-building, painting, joinery and
carpentry, smiths' work, pottery and glass-making, weaving, and many others:
a body of art most important to the public in general, but still more
so to us handicraftsmen; since there is scarce anything that they use,
and that we fashion, but it has always been thought to be unfinished till
it has had some touch or other of decoration about it. True it is, that
in many or most cases we have got so used to this ornament, that we look
upon it as if it had grown of itself, and note it no more than the mosses
on the dry sticks with which we light our files. So much the worse! for
there is the decoration, or some pretence of it, and it has, or ought
to have, a use and a meaning. For, and this is at the root of the whole
matter, everything made by man's hands has a form, which must be either
beautiful or ugly; beautiful if it is in accord with Nature, and helps
her; ugly if it is discordant with Nature, and thwarts her; it cannot
be indifferent; we, for our parts are busy or sluggish, eager or unhappy,
and our eyes are apt to get dulled to this eventfulness of form in those
things which we are always looking at. Now it is one of the chief uses
of decoration, the chief part of its alliance with nature, that it has
to sharpen our dulled senses in this matter: for this end are those wonders
of intricate patterns interwoven, those strange forms invented, that men
have so long delighted in: forms and intricacies that do not necessarily
imitate nature, but in which the hand of the craftsman is guided to work
in the way that she does, till the web, the cup, or the knife, look as
natural, nay as lovely, as the green field, the river bank, or the mountain
flint.
To give people pleasure
in the things they must perforce use, that is one great office of decoration;
to give people pleasure in the things they must perforce make, that is
the other use of it.
Does not our subject
look important enough now? I say that without these arts, our rest would
be vacant and uninteresting, our labour mere endurance, mere wearing away
of body and mind.
As for that last use
of these arts, the giving us pleasure in our work, I scarcely know how
to speak strongly enough of it; and yet if I did not know the value of
repeating a truth again and again, I should have to excuse myself to you
for saying any more about this, when I remember how a great man now living
has spoken of it: I mean my friend Professor John Ruskin: if you read
the chapter in the 2nd vol. of his Stones of Venice entitled, `On the
Nature of Gothic, and the Office of the Workman therein,' you will read
at once the truest and the most eloquent words that can possibly be said
on the subject. What I have to say upon it can scarcely be more than an
echo of his words, yet I repeat there is some use in reiterating a truth,
lest it be forgotten; so I will say this much further; we all know what
people have said about the curse of labour, and what heavy and grievous
nonsense are the more part of their words thereupon; whereas indeed the
real curses of craftsmen have been the curse of stupidity, and the curse
of injustice from within and from without: no, I cannot suppose there
is anybody here who would think it either a good life, or an amusing one,
to sit with one's hands before one doing nothing - to live like a gentleman,
as fools call it.
Nevertheless there
is dull work to be done, and a weary business it is setting men about
such work, and seeing them through it, and I would rather do the work
twice over with my own hands than have such a job: but now only let the
arts we are talking of ornament our labour, and be widely spread, intelligent,
well understood both by the maker and the user, let them grow in one word
popular, and there will be pretty much an end of dull work and its wearing
slavery; and no man will an longer have an excuse for talking about the
curse of labour, no man will any longer have an excuse for evading the
blessing of labour. I believe there is nothing that will aid the world's
progress so much as the attainment of this; I protest there is nothing
in the world that I desire so much as this, wrapped up, as I am sure it
is, with changes political and social, that in one way or another we all
desire.
Now if the objection
be made, that these arts have been the handmaids of luxury, of tyranny,
and of superstition, I must needs say that it is true in a sense; they
have been so used, as many other excellent things have been. It is also
true that, among some nations, their most vigorous and freest times have
been the very blossoming times of art; while at the same time, I must
allow that these decorative arts have flourished among oppressed peoples,
who have seemed to have no hope of freedom; yet I do not think that we
shall be wrong in thinking that at such times, among such peoples, art
at least was free; when it has not been, when it has really been gripped
by superstition, by luxury, it has straightway begun to sicken under that
grip. Nor must you forget that when men say popes, kings, and emperors
built such and such buildings, it is a mere way of speaking. You look
in your history-books to see who built Westminster Abbey, who built St.
Sophia at Constantinople, and they tell you Henry III., Justinian the
Emperor. Did they? or, rather, men like you and me, handicraftsmen, who
have left no names behind them, nothing but their work?
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