Persian Art as Pinnacle on Display in London
LONDON (FT) -- What could be more quintessentially English than William Morris’s interior designs? The sumptuous repeating patterns created by the chief founder of Britain’s 19th-century Arts and Crafts movement — popularized in his day by Morris & Co’s wallpapers and furnishing fabrics — have become global signifiers of an innately British style, copiously reproduced since his work exited copyright in the 1960s.
Yet a show at the William Morris Gallery, his childhood home in Walthamstow, northeast London, which houses the largest collection of his work, shines light on a sometimes obscured inspiration. William Morris & Art from the Islamic World is the first exhibition to trace the profound influence of Iranian, Turkish and Syrian arts on the geometrically precise designs of the feted English poet, artist and radical socialist. Exploring their importance in his life and work, the show hints at wider exchanges between Victorian Britain and the Islamic world, while raising enduring questions about originality, imitation and appropriation.
The gallery’s director, Hadrian Garrard, believes Morris’s Islamic world sources are not sufficiently acknowledged. “For us,” he tells me, “it matters in a community where 20 percent of residents identify as Muslim,” as well as being “important to rethink what we mean by Britishness and Englishness.” A corner of the permanent collection already touches on the subject. But, he adds, “we’re threading it into the rehang” planned for the public gallery’s 75th anniversary next year, which will also bring an exhibition on the spread of his designs, Morris Mania.
Morris (1834-1896) was less explicit about his Islamic sources than artist friends such as William De Morgan (whose “Lion Rampant” tile panel of 1888-98 appears in an upstairs room). Yet their influence can be inferred from his lectures, his work steering acquisitions for the South Kensington Museum (later renamed the V&A) and from what he owned. “Once you put them side by side, you can’t not see it,” Garrard says.
Even with its muted browns, the staggered blooms in Morris’s machine-woven carpet “Tulip and Lily” (1875) mirror the alternating red and blue tulip heads of a 17th-century Ottoman quilt fragment he owned. The composition of his block-printed wallpaper “Wild Tulip” (1884), in white on salmon pink, unmistakably echoes the blue, green and red profusion of carnations and tulips on a 17th-century plate from Iznik, Turkey, also in his collection. Turkish wild tulips were smaller than the Dutch cultivars of tulip mania, appearing budlike in his delicate design.
Such objects from Morris’s cherished personal collection are reunited here for the first time since his death — from his house-museums in England, and public collections such as the V&A and Birmingham Museums Trust. They range from illustrated volumes of the Iranian epic poem the Shahnameh and the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (from which Morris read to his family) to three gorgeous 16th-century Ottoman-Syrian vine trellis tiles in indigo, turquoise and green.
Though Morris never ventured east of Italy, he began to collect west Asian art in his thirties from dealers and auctions, studying fragments to discern technique. He was “not a collector, but a magpie”, the show’s lead curator, Rowan Bain, tells me. He trawled everything that caught his eye, from tourist tat to masterpieces. All 60 works on show were owned or made by Morris or his daughter, May, an embroidery artist who travelled to Egypt and Morocco, and became one of her father’s first curators.
Morris, along with John Ruskin and Augustus Pugin, was part of a 19th-century backlash against the industrial revolution’s machine-age mass production. His life-long pursuit of a “beautiful house” entailed vegetal and floral designs, often with fauna, in which “nature was tamed into well-ordered patterns for the home,” Bain writes in the accompanying book Tulips & Peacocks. As the architect Shahed Saleem notes in the book, an “English aesthetic fantasy” idealized the Islamic world for its premodern links between artist, craft and nature.
It was a time when Oriental artifacts were in demand, often in immersive, designed interiors (Leighton House in London’s Holland Park being a rare survivor today, and one Morris is assumed to have visited). Photographs of Kelmscott House, Morris’s Thameside home in Hammersmith, west London, show a 17th-century Safavid red-ground “Vase” carpet from Kerman in Iran rising up the dining room wall and ceiling like a canopy. “Eastern rugs were not made to be trod on with hobnailed boots,” Morris told puzzled visitors, while May described the carpeted “Eastern Wall”, with its twin metalwork peacocks, as having “more than a touch of the Thousand and One Nights”.
The c1870 Iranian peacocks in brass and turquoise are in the show, along with Morris’s 17th-century Iranian lampstand with cheetahs and gazelles, and a 19th-century Iranian Qajar steel casket with gilt decoration. His “Flower Garden” (1879), suggesting the “beauties of inlaid metal”,