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Work 9,472 of 57,235
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* This information may change as the result of ongoing research.
William Morris (British, Walthamstow, London 1834 - 1896 Hammersmith, London)
Morris & Company
Pink and Rose
ca. 1890
Hand-block-printed wallpaper
sheet: 27 x 21 1/2 in. (68.6 x 54.6 cm)
Print
Purchase, Edward C. Moore Jr. Gift, 1923
23.163.4a
Henry James described William Morris as "the poet and paper-maker" in 1881. Indeed, despite his many designs for stained glass, textiles, tapestries, furniture, and books, it is for his wallpapers that Morris is best known today. Reinventing the decorative vocabulary of his time, Morris believed that "any decoration is futile…when it does not remind you of something beyond itself." He turned to nature for inspiration, seeking to "turn a room into a bower, a refuge." The English countryside, with its hedgerows and native field and garden flowers, remained his touchstone throughout the period of over thirty years during which he designed wallpaper.

Beginning in 1862 with the firm Morris, Marshall, Faulkner, and Company and later on his own with Morris & Company, Morris designed forty-one wallpapers and five ceiling papers. "Pink and Rose," from about 1890, is typical of his late style, which is characterized by naturalism and a clearly articulated repeating pattern. Morris believed that beauty, imagination, and order were the essential components of a successful design; all three elements are evident in this example of his wallpaper. His papers not only were an immense commercial success during his lifetime, but they also played a significant role in raising the status of English wallpaper to a position of international preeminence in the last quarter of the nineteenth century.