A endeavour towards the teaching of John Ruskin and William Morris
Date Created
1901
Identifier
NK1142.AT39 [Special Collections]
Publisher
Essex House Press
Abstract
‘The Arts and Craft movement began with the object of making useful things, of making them well and of making them beautiful; goodness and beauty were to the leaders of the movement synonymous terms.’
So wrote C. R. Ashbee (1863-1942), the designer who was instrumental in starting Essex House Press in 1898 as part of his larger Guild of Handicrafts (established 1886). With workmen from Kelmscott (and two Albion presses), Ashbee continued Morris’s ideals of a return to craftsmanship through co-operation and a meaningful engagement in work. Ashbee printed 83 books under the Essex House imprint, and this one (no. 273 of 350 copies) was the first to contain Ashbee’s own design type, Endeavour.
So wrote C. R. Ashbee (1863-1942), the designer who was instrumental in starting Essex House Press in 1898 as part of his larger Guild of Handicrafts (established 1886). With workmen from Kelmscott (and two Albion presses), Ashbee continued Morris’s ideals of a return to craftsmanship through co-operation and a meaningful engagement in work. Ashbee printed 83 books under the Essex House imprint, and this one (no. 273 of 350 copies) was the first to contain Ashbee’s own design type, Endeavour.
Files
Citation
Ashbee, Charles Robert, Ruskin, John, and Morris, William, “A endeavour towards the teaching of John Ruskin and William Morris,” ourheritage.ac.nz | OUR Heritage, accessed October 14, 2024, https://ourheritage.ac.nz/items/show/7637.