Furnishing Fabric
1928 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This furnishing fabric was designed by Minnie McLeish for William Foxton in 1928. The boldly coloured flowers show the influence of Cubism.
The firm of William Foxton Ltd., founded in 1903, produced some of the most innovative artist-designed textiles of the 1920s. It commissioned artists such as Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Claude Lovat Fraser, F. Gregory Brown and Minnie McLeish. In 1915 William Foxton helped to found the Design and Industries Association. The aim was to improve the standard of British industrial design by exhibiting new designs and communicating information about them to those working in the field.
The firm of William Foxton Ltd., founded in 1903, produced some of the most innovative artist-designed textiles of the 1920s. It commissioned artists such as Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Claude Lovat Fraser, F. Gregory Brown and Minnie McLeish. In 1915 William Foxton helped to found the Design and Industries Association. The aim was to improve the standard of British industrial design by exhibiting new designs and communicating information about them to those working in the field.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Roller printed cotton |
Brief description | Roller printed cotton designed by Minnie McLeish for William Foxton, British, 1928. |
Physical description | Cubist flower motif in pink, blue, grey, green and neutral shades. The same design but a different colourway to CIRC.628-1956 and CIRC.622-1964. |
Dimensions |
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Style | |
Credit line | Given by the British Institute of Industrial Arts |
Summary | This furnishing fabric was designed by Minnie McLeish for William Foxton in 1928. The boldly coloured flowers show the influence of Cubism. The firm of William Foxton Ltd., founded in 1903, produced some of the most innovative artist-designed textiles of the 1920s. It commissioned artists such as Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Claude Lovat Fraser, F. Gregory Brown and Minnie McLeish. In 1915 William Foxton helped to found the Design and Industries Association. The aim was to improve the standard of British industrial design by exhibiting new designs and communicating information about them to those working in the field. |
Bibliographic reference | Samuels, Charlotte. Art Deco Textiles. London : V&A Publications, 2003. Plate 95.
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Collection | |
Accession number | T.400-1934 |
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Record created | September 25, 2002 |
Record URL |
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