Review Provides full text of art and architecture journals
Click Here to go back to the Home Screen
| |
Browse this Journal: The Craftsman by clicking on the Article Title below
The Craftsman: 121 Chapters found for Volume : 13
Issue: 1 | |
|
- | 1 pp. | |
1 | 18 pp. | |
14 | 8 pp. | |
22 | 10 pp. | |
32 | Love, the Logician: a Story Katharine Metcalf Roof |
3 pp. |
35 | Poem: Portents Charles G. D. Roberts |
1 pp. |
36 | 14 pp. | |
50 | 8 pp. | |
58 | A Song of the Tide Agnes Lee |
1 pp. |
59 | 9 pp. | |
68 | 13 pp. | |
81 | 1 pp. | |
82 | Design in Theory and Practice - a Series of Lessons: Number I Ernest A. Batchelder |
8 pp. |
90 | 4 pp. | |
94 | 9 pp. | |
103 | 5 pp. | |
108 | 8 pp. | |
112 | Als Ik Kan The Editor |
1 pp. |
116 | 9 pp. | |
Issue: 2 | |
|
- | 1 pp. | |
125 | 9 pp. | |
134 | Satisfaction Edwin L. Sabin |
1 pp. |
135 | 9 pp. | |
140 | 9 pp. | |
149 | A Thanksgiving Hymn Emery Pottle |
1 pp. |
150 | 8 pp. | |
158 | 10 pp. | |
168 | 5 pp. | |
173 | 7 pp. | |
181 | The Red Plowman: a Story Hamlin Garland |
2 pp. |
182 | In the Autumn Grass Hamlin Garland |
1 pp. |
183 | 9 pp. | |
192 | 7 pp. | |
199 | A Three Thousand Dollar House That Is Conveniently Arranged and Beautiful Mary Linton Bookwalter |
7 pp. |
206 | Design in Theory and Practice - a Series of Lessons: Number II Ernest A. Batchelder |
8 pp. |
214 | 4 pp. | |
218 | 8 pp. | |
226 | 3 pp. | |
229 | 1 pp. | |
230 | 7 pp. | |
237 | Als Ik Kan The Editor |
3 pp. |
240 | 5 pp. | |
Issue: 3 | |
|
245 | The White Woman Katharine Metcalf Roof |
17 pp. |
257 | Robert Louis Stevenson, an Impression Charlotte Eaton |
4 pp. |
261 | Leon Dabo, Poet in Color John Spargo |
10 pp. |
271 | Edvard Grieg: Norway's National Tone Poet Katharine Metcalf Roof |
8 pp. |
279 | Mists Below the Mountains Ruth Holmes |
1 pp. |
280 | 12 pp. | |
292 | A Christmas Song Mary McNeil Fenollosa |
1 pp. |
293 | 5 pp. | |
298 | 6 pp. | |
304 | 6 pp. | |
310 | 7 pp. | |
317 | 1 pp. | |
318 | 13 pp. | |
331 | 1 pp. | |
332 | Design in Theory and Practice - a Series of Lessons: Number III Ernest A. Batchelder |
8 pp. |
340 | Training for Interior Decorators - Number 1 Mary Linton Bookwalter |
3 pp. |
343 | 1 pp. | |
344 | 9 pp. | |
353 | 5 pp. | |
358 | 3 pp. | |
361 | 12 pp. | |
Issue: 4 | |
|
374 | 1 pp. | |
375 | The Guild Stamp and the Union Label The Editor |
9 pp. |
384 | The Dreamer Edith Gerry Helm |
1 pp. |
385 | 10 pp. | |
395 | The Staff Elsa Barker |
1 pp. |
396 | 1 pp. | |
397 | 7 pp. | |
400 | 9 pp. | |
409 | Behold, This Dreamer: a Story Emery Pottle |
11 pp. |
420 | 13 pp. | |
433 | To Boycott the Billboard - the Right of the Citizen to an Unposted Landscape Clinton Rogers Woodruff |
6 pp. |
439 | Chemical Changes in Oil Paintings Hector Alliot |
5 pp. |
444 | A Carpenter Who Is a Collector of Art Objects Grace Whitworth |
6 pp. |
450 | The Development of Domestic Architecture On the Pacific Coast Una Nixson Hopkins |
8 pp. |
458 | Design in Theory and Practice - a Series of Lessons: Number IV Ernest A. Batchelder |
15 pp. |
473 | Doing Over a Ballroom Into a Nursery: Lesson II Mary Linton Bookwalter |
2 pp. |
475 | 11 pp. | |
486 | 4 pp. | |
490 | 3 pp. | |
Issue: 5 | |
|
493 | The Visit: an Ojibway Romance Frederick R. Burton |
14 pp. |
505 | 7 pp. | |
512 | 20 pp. | |
532 | What a Work of Art Ought to Be Jean François Millet |
1 pp. |
533 | England's Fields are Green Lloyd Roberts |
1 pp. |
534 | 4 pp. | |
538 | 6 pp. | |
544 | The Transplanting of Ann Young: a Story Lucretia D. Clapp |
8 pp. |
552 | The Land Which Is Afar Off Emery Pottle |
1 pp. |
553 | 10 pp. | |
563 | The Play Confessions of a Busy Man J. George Frederick |
4 pp. |
567 | What the Return to Nature Really Means Edward Carpenter |
1 pp. |
568 | 5 pp. | |
573 | 5 pp. | |
578 | Design in Theory and Practice: a Series of Lessons: Number V Ernest A. Batchelder |
10 pp. |
588 | Parts of Two Remodeling Contracts: Lesson III Mary Linton Bookwalter |
7 pp. |
595 | 4 pp. | |
599 | 6 pp. | |
605 | 3 pp. | |
608 | 5 pp. | |
Issue: 6 | |
|
615 | Bronze Sculpture in Value to the Art History Nation Giles Edgerton |
16 pp. |
630 | Alter Ego Elsa Barker |
1 pp. |
631 | The Rebellion of Maskenozha: a Sequel to the Visit Frederick Burton |
12 pp. |
643 | The Indian Weaver Edwin L. Sabin |
1 pp. |
644 | 9 pp. | |
653 | Profitable Handicrafts and the Successful Promotion of Home Industries George De Szögyénÿ |
9 pp. |
662 | Life F. W. Dorn |
1 pp. |
663 | 5 pp. | |
668 | Have Craft Workers a Duty? William Morris |
1 pp. |
669 | 6 pp. | |
675 | 7 pp. | |
682 | 7 pp. | |
689 | Design in Theory and Practice - a Series of Lessons: Number Vi Ernest A. Batchelder |
8 pp. |
697 | Remodeling and Decorating a Suburban House: Lesson IV Mary Linton Bookwalter |
7 pp. |
704 | 11 pp. | |
717 | The Greenwich Handicraft School Katherine Lord |
7 pp. |
722 | Als Ik Kan The Editor |
3 pp. |
725 | 6 pp. | |
731 | 2 pp. |
Browse this Journal: The Craftsman by Volume by clicking on the cover image below
The Craftsman: 31 Volumes found
Title: The Craftsman
Place of Publication: Eastwood, NY USA
Publisher: United Crafts
Frequency: Monthly
Period of Publication: 1901-1916
Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-31, 1901-1916
Type of Publication: Journal
Description: The Craftsman played a seminal role in promoting the philosophy and ideals of the Arts and Crafts movement in America. It was founded by the designer Gustav Stickley (1858-1942) and published by his workshop United Crafts in Eastwood, New York. The influence of the English craft aesthetic on the The Craftsman is evident in the fact that four of the five articles in the first issue of the journal were on the work of William Morris and Morris & Company, and the second issue was largely devoted to the writings of John Ruskin. Other articles in the first two years of the journal included ‘Revival of English Handicrafts: the Haslemere Industries’; ‘Cobden-Sanderson and the Doves Bindery’; and ‘Some Cornish Craftsmen’. It was only towards the end of the second year of The Craftsman that it began to turn its attention to the crafts in other countries, and particularly America. Later articles include ‘René Lalique: His Rank Among Contemporary Artists’; ‘L’Art Nouveau, Its Origin and Development’; ‘Rookwood Pottery’; ‘Workshops and Residence of M. René Lalique’; ‘L'Art Nouveau: An Argument and Defence’; ‘Korin and the Decorative Art of Japan’; ‘Japanese Book Illustrations’; ‘Craftsmanship in the New York Schools’; ‘The Influence of the "Mission Style" Upon the Civic and Domestic Architecture of Modern California’, ‘August Rodin’; ‘Mural Painting from the American Point of View’; 'Tiffany and Company, at the St. Louis Exposition’; ‘The Future of Ceramics in America’; ‘Rossetti and Botticelli: a Comparison of Ideals and Art’; ‘The Decorations of the Chancel of Saint Thomas' Church, New York City: Work of John La Farge and Augustus St. Gaudens; ‘The New Art in Photography: Work of Clarence H. White, a Leader Among the Photo-Secessionists’; ‘Photography as One of the Fine Arts: the Camera Pictures of Alvin Langdon Coburn’; ‘Is There a Sex Distinction in Art? The Attitude of the Critic Toward Women's Exhibits’; ‘Why the Handicraft Guild at Chipping Campden Has Not Been a Business Success’; ‘Modern German Art: its Revelation of Present Social and Political Conditions in Prussianized Germany’; ‘An afternoon with Walter Crane’; ‘Town Planning in Theory and in Practice: the Work of Raymond Unwin’; ‘Mary Cassatt's Achievement: its Value to the World of Art’; ‘The strange genius of Aubrey Beardsley’; and ‘The new idea in French furniture, as expressed by Maurice Dufrène’ Gustav Stickley wrote frequently for The Craftsman. Among other contributors were Charles F. Binns, Ernest A. Batchelder, Ralph Waldo Emerson, G.K. Chesterton and Leopold Stokowski. |
To see all the Journals and other Publications on a particular subject click:
Interior Design and Decoration
Available: Now
|