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The Art of Decorative Design

This illustrated 1862 book, describing how to incorporate ornament into design, encouraged the middle classes to decorate their homes themselves.

Christopher Dresser (Author)

9781108080408, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 4 May 2019

302 pages, 162 b/w illus. 24 colour illus.
23 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm, 0.4 kg

Christopher Dresser (1834–1904) was arguably the first British industrial designer, and this 1862 work was his most influential book. He worked in a variety of media, from wallpaper and textile design to metalwork and ceramics, but was also a botanist, and his two professorial roles in fine and ornamental arts, at the South Kensington Museum and the Crystal Palace, included the teaching of botany. Unlike William Morris, Dresser believed that good design could and should be mass-produced by industrial methods, so that it became affordable to all classes. He describes here how decorative ornament should be used in design, the importance of taking inspiration from natural (usually plant) models, and issues of proportion, balance and gradation. The book, which encouraged the rising middle classes to decorate their homes themselves, is highly illustrated: the colour plates can be viewed online at www.cambridge.org/9781108080408, by clicking on the 'Resources' button.

Preface
1. Primarily, on the nature and character of ornament
2. The ministrations of plants to ornament
3. Grades in decorative art
4. The affinity of the aesthetic arts
5. Analysis of ornamental forms
6. Order
7. Repetition
8. Curves
9. Proportion
10. Alternation
11. Adaptation
12. The power of ornament to express feelings and ideas
13. Principles common to ornament
Appendix.

Subject Areas: Art forms [AF]

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