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English
craftsman, poet, and early socialist, whose designs generated the
Arts and Crafts Movement in the later half of the 19th century,
Morris encouraged to return to handmade objects and rejected standard
tastes. He was associated with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and
a close friend of the painter-poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti and his
sister Christina Rossetti, also a poet.
"If you want a golden rule that will fit everybody, this is
it: Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful,
or believe to be beautiful."
(from The Beauty of Life, 1880)
Morris was born in Walthamstow, Greater London, the son of a successful
businessman. He attended Marlborough College. For a while he considered
taking Holy Orders, but he eventually renounced the Church, beginning
his studies in architecture in Oxford. Morris took his degree in
1856, and in the same year published his early poems in The Oxford
and Cambridge Magazine - he also financed the publication. In
1858 Morris worked with Rossetti, Burne-Jones, and others on the
frescoes in the Oxford Union. He also published THE DEFENCE OF GUENEVERE
AND OTHER POEMS (1858), which contains much of his best work, including
'The Haystack in the Floods', 'Concerning Geffray Teste Noire',
'Shameful Death', and 'Golden Wings'. They all have medieval settings
- Morris was obsessed with the medieval world.
In
1859 Morris married Jane Burden and worked as a professional painter
(1857-62). Their home, Red House at Bexley, was designed by Philip
Webb. It was an important landmark in domestic architecture. Morris
gained literary fame with the romantic narrative THE LIFE AND DEATH
OF JASON, which appeared in 1867, and was based on the story of
Jason, Medea, and the Argonauts. It was followed by THE EARTHLY
PARADISE (1868-70), and BOOK OF VERSE (1870).
In the 1860s Morris started to revolutionize the art of house decoration
and furniture design in England after founding the firm of Morris,
Marshall, Faulkner & Co. The firm first specialized in providing
stained glass and fittings for churches, but gradually won a clientele
for domestic ware. Morris's visits to Iceland in the 1870s inspired
The Story of Sigurd the Volsung and the Fall of the Nibelungs
(1876), which is regarded as his principal poetic achievement. In
1877 he founded the Society for the protection of Ancient Buildings
in protest against the destruction being caused by the restorers.
Morris defined art as 'the expression by man of his pleasure
in labour'. In the Middle Ages, according to Morris, artists
were plain workmen. Things which are today's museum pieces, where
once common artefacts. Art should return to its origins: 'a happiness
for the maker and the user.'
"I do not want art for a few, any more than I want education
for a few, or freedom for a few."
The Morris family moved into Kelmscott House at Hammersmith in
1878. In 1883 he joined the Social Democratic Federation and subsequently
organized the Socialist League, with its own publication, The
Commonwealth. In 1887 he and George Bernard Shaw led a political
demonstration in London.
Morris's
love for old handsome books and illuminated manuscripts resulted
in the founding of the Kelmscott Press. From 1891 to 1898 it produced
53 titles in 66 volumes, including among others The Works of
Geoffrey Chaucer. He also designed three typestyles for his
press, and translated Virgil's Aeneid (1875), Odyssey
(1887), and Beowulf (1895). Morris's novel The Well at
the World's End (1896) was a forerunner of J.R.R. Tolkien's
kind of secondary word fantasy literature. A Dream of John Ball
(1888) and News from Nowhere (1891) were both socialist fantasies
cast in a dream setting.
"The Kelmscott Press reduced the matter to an absurdity -
as seen from the point of view of brute serviceability alone -
by issuing books for modern use, edited with the obsolete spelling,
printed in black-letter, and bound in limp vellum fitted with
thongs. As a further characteristic feature which fixes the economic
place of artistic book making, there is the fact that these elegant
books are, at their best, printed in limited editions. A limited
edition is in effect a guarantee - somewhat crude, it is true
- that this book is scarce and that it therefore is costly and
lends pecuniary distinction to its consumer."
(from The Theory of the Leisure Class by Thorstein Veblen,
1953, originally published 1899)
On his death, Morris was widely mourned as 'our best man' by his
fellow socialists. His view that the true stimulation to useful
labour must be found in the work itself is still relevant. His designs
brought about a complete revolution in public taste, though he was
aware that only the rich could afford the products of his firm.
For further reading: Life of William Morris by John W.
Mackail (1889); William Morris, A Critical Study by John Drinkwater
(1912); Rehabilitations and Other Essays by C.S. Lewis (1939);
William Morris: Romantic to Revolutionary by E.P. Thompson (1955);
William Morris: His Life, Works, and Friends by Philip Henderson
(1967); The Work of William Morris by Paul Thompson (1967); William
Morris by Holbrook Jackson (1971); William Morris: The Man and
the Myth by Robert P. Arnot (1976); Worlds Beyond the World: The
Fantastic Vision of William Morris by Richard Mathews (1978);
William Morris: A Reference Guide by Gary L. Aho (1985); William
Morris: Romantic to Revolutionary, ed. by E.P. Thompson (1988);
The Romances of William Morris by Amanda Hodgson (1987); William
Morris: A Life for Our Time by F. MacCarthy (1994); William Morris:
The Critical Heritage, ed. by Peter Faulkner (1995); Art, Enterprise
and Ethics: The Life and Work of William Morris by Charles Harvey,
Jon Press (1996); William Morris: Redesigning the World by John
Burdick (1998); William Morris and the Aesthetic Constitution
of Politics by Bradley J. MacDonald (1999)
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Selected works:
- The Defence of Guenevere and other Poems, 1858
- The Life
and Death of Jason, 1867
- The Earthy Paradise, 1868-70
- Books
of Verse, 1870
- Love is Enough, 1872
- Aeneid, 1875 (translation)
- Story of Sigurd the Volsung and the Fall of the Niblungs, 1876
(4 vols.)
- The Decorative Arts, 1878
- Chants for Socialists,
1884-85
- Odyssey, 1887 (translation)
- A Dream of John Ball,
1888
- The House of the Wolfings, 1889
- The Story of the Glittering
Plain, or the Land of Living Men, 1890
- News from Nowhere, 1890
- Poems by the Way, 1891
- The Wood Beyond the World, 1894
- Child
Christopher, 1895
- Beowulf, 1895 (translation)
- The Well at
the World's End, 1896
- The Sundering Flood, 1898
- The Collected
Works of William Morris, 1910-15 (24 vols., ed. May Morris)
-
Stories in Prose, Stories in Verse, Shorter Poems, Lectures and
Essays, 1934
- William Morris, Artist, Writer, Socialist, 1936
(2 vols. ed. May Morris)
- The Letters of William Morris to his
Family and Friends, 1950 (ed. Philip Henderson)
- Unpublished
Letters, 1951
- Selected Writings, 1963
- The Collected Letters
of William Morris, 1984
- Political Writings of William Morris,
1984 (ed. by A.L. Morton)
- The Collected Letters of William Morris,
Part B: 1885-1888, 1987
- The Collected Letters of William Morris,
Part A: 1881-1884, 1988
- The Collected Letters of William Morris:
1889-1892, vol III, 1996
- The Collected Letters of William Morris: 1893-1896, vol. IV,
1996
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This biography was written by Petri Liukkonen.
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