Posted on September 8, 2017


William Morris, one of the "biggies" in the Arts and Crafts movement, thought that design and manufacture should be integrated. Design is sort of a mental or intellectual thing - dreaming up an idea of what something looks like, and communicating that idea with drawings and descriptions. Actual manufacture of the object is, of course, physical. And Morris thought that whoever did the design should ALSO know how to do the physical task of making the item and should also be making decisions about the manufacturing of the item.

The result of the Arts and Crafts movement was that people who designed things, and also people who did things that were considered "handicrafts," making practical things like bowls and houses and shawls and jewelry, were elevated to the status of artists. It used to be that only painters and sculptors were "really" artists.
(We still use "fine arts" to mean the kinds of products, like paintings and statues, that have no practical use but are enjoyed only for their aesthetic or intellectual appeal.)
Today, in order to celebrate the Arts and Crafts movement and its results, we celebrate the birthdays of four artists who work with "crafts" mediums:
Barbara Walch - ceramics
Sonja Blomdahl - glass
![]() |
Sonja Blomdahl is a glassblower who studied her craft (art) in Sweden. Today she lives in Seattle, but her work can be seen in museums and galleries all over the world. |
Richard H. Reinhardt - metal smithing / jewelry making
![]() |
Silversmith and jewelry designer Richard H. Reinhardt not only plied his craft (art), he also taught it, founding the jewelry and metalsmithing programs at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. |
Augustus Aaron Wilson - wood carving
![]() |
Although most of his carvings are of ducks, shore birds, seagulls, and songbirds, Wilson occasionally carved other animals as well. |
Also on this date:
Plan ahead:
Check out my Pinterest boards for:
And here are my Pinterest boards for: