Kiddies Town thumbnail 1
Kiddies Town thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level C , Case DW, Shelf 104

Kiddies Town

Wallpaper
1951 (designed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This paper is from the John Line series '1951 Limited Editions'. The series employed talented and innovative designers already established in the field of textiles, such as Groag and Lucienne Day. The series itself proved to be important and influential, establishing the terms 'modern' and 'contemporary' as selling points.

This, as its title tells us, is a nursery wallpaper. The design consists of child-like line drawings, red on a plain ground, of simple almost hieroglyphic motifs - sun, flower, house, balloon, fish, ball, tree and so on. At first sight it appears naive, but it is actually rather sophisticated, being inspired, like many 1950s patterns, by the line drawings of the artist Paul Klee. This paper was definitely for the middle-class nursery, being too specialised, too expensive and not sufficiently colourful to appeal to popular taste.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleKiddies Town (manufacturer's title)
Materials and techniques
Colour machine print, on paper
Brief description
Portion of nursery wallpaper 'Kiddies Town', child-like drawings of simple almost hieroglyphic motifs, red on a plain ground; Colour machine print, on paper; Design by Jacqueline Groag; Produced John Line and Sons Ltd.; England; 1951.
Physical description
Portion of nursery wallpaper 'Kiddies Town', child-like drawings of simple almost hieroglyphic motifs - sun, flower, house, balloon, fish, ball, tree etc. - in the style of the line drawings of Paul Klee, red on a plain ground; Colour machine print, on paper.
Dimensions
  • Height: 72.8cm
  • Width: 54.5cm
Credit line
Given by John Line & Sons Ltd
Object history
Given by John Line & Sons Ltd.
Historical context
This paper is from the John Line series '1951 Limited Editions'. The series employed talented and innovative designers already established in the field of textiles, such as Groag and Lucienne Day. The series itself proved to be important and influential, establishing the terms 'modern' and 'contemporary' as selling points.

This, as its title tells us, is a nursery wallpaper. The design consists of child-like line drawings, red on a plain ground, of simple almost hieroglyphic motifs - sun, flower, house, balloon, fish, ball, tree and so on. Seemingly naive, it is actually rather sophisticated, being derived, like many 1950s patterns, from the line drawings of Paul Klee. This paper was definitely for the middle-class nursery, being too specialised, too expensive and too dull in colour to appeal to popular taste.

[Gill Saunders, 'British Design at Home', p.138]
Subjects depicted
Summary
This paper is from the John Line series '1951 Limited Editions'. The series employed talented and innovative designers already established in the field of textiles, such as Groag and Lucienne Day. The series itself proved to be important and influential, establishing the terms 'modern' and 'contemporary' as selling points.

This, as its title tells us, is a nursery wallpaper. The design consists of child-like line drawings, red on a plain ground, of simple almost hieroglyphic motifs - sun, flower, house, balloon, fish, ball, tree and so on. At first sight it appears naive, but it is actually rather sophisticated, being inspired, like many 1950s patterns, by the line drawings of the artist Paul Klee. This paper was definitely for the middle-class nursery, being too specialised, too expensive and not sufficiently colourful to appeal to popular taste.
Bibliographic reference
Oman, Charles C., and Hamilton, Jean. Wallpapers: a history and illustrated catalogue of the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum. London: Sotheby Publications, in association with the Victoria and Albert Museum, 1982.
Collection
Accession number
E.881-1978

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Record createdFebruary 11, 2000
Record URL
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