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Title: Art Workers' Quarterly

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: Chapman & Hall

 

Frequency: Quareterly

 

Period of Publication: 1902-1906

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-5, 1902-1906, plus two special issues, 1908

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: The Art Workers' Quarterly, subtitled, A Portfolio of Practical Designs for Decorative and Applied Arts, was published in five volumes by Chapman & Hall, London, between 1902 and 1906. The editor was W.G. Paulson Townsend, the author of several books and articles on the decorative arts. In his foreword to volume 1, no. 1, he wrote that the object of The Art Workers' Quarterly, was provide a source of inspiration for art workers and “to supply designs in a readily applicable form to those who do not invent, plan, or adapt ornament, and who find difficulty in obtaining good and suitable suggestions for their work. Further, it is his aim to assist those who may have some knowledge of the principles on which ornamental design is constructed, by publishing specimens of good work from the best historical and contemporary examples”. Like The Craftsman, launched the previous year in the USA, William Morris was the subject of the first article in The Art Workers’ Quarterly. Subsequent articles reported on the work and activities of the leading art schools including the Royal Academy Schools, Royal School of Art Needlework, the Royal College of Art, Central School of Arts and Crafts, Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts, and Keswick School of Industrial Arts, and the principle craft organizations, guilds and societies such as the Church Crafts League, the Home Arts and Industries Association, the Dress Designers Exhibition Society, the Clarion Guild of Handicrafts, and the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society. There were also articles on Lace Making in Ireland; the British Section at the St. Louis Exposition of 1904; the Impact of Modern Social and Economic Conditions on the Decorative Arts; the architecture of Letchworth Garden City, etc. These were interspersed with practical, well-illustrated articles on wood block printing, mural decoration, ornamental lettering, metalwork, embroidery, weaving, furniture, ceramics, stained glass, bookbinding, etc. Townsend was successful in attracting many of the leading commentators on the decorative arts to write pieces for The Art Workers’ Quarterly, including May Morris, Walter Crane, J. Illingworth Kay, Alexander Fisher, Lawrence Weaver, Bernard Rackham, Silvester Sparrow, Alfred Stevens, A. Romney Green, and James Guthrie. Among artists and designers whose work featured in The Art Workers’ Quarterly were some of the major figures in the English Arts and Crafts movement including Ambrose Heal Jr., Walter Crane, C.F.A. Voysey, Alexander Fisher, May Morris, R.A. Dawson. W.J. Neatby, Harold Stabler, Allan Vigers, W. Curtis Green, A. Romney Green. Heywood Sumner, Charles E. Dawson, Edward Spencer, Bernard Cuzner, Arthur Gaskin, Charles Spooner, C.R. Ashbee, Paul Woodroffe, Ernest Gimson, Mary Seton Fraser Tytler (Mrs G.F. Watts), Ernestine Mills and Sidney Barnsley An additional two special issues of The Art Workers’ Quarterly were published in August and December 1908. These contained the papers and extracts of papers read at the Third International Art Congress for the development of Drawing and Art Teaching and the Application to Industries held in London, August, 1908, as well as a record of the Retrospective Exhibition of Students’ Works, held at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, in connection with the Congress. Together with volumes 1-5 of The Art Workers’ Quarterly, these have also been digitized for ReVIEW.

 

 

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Printing

 

Illustration

 

Mural Decoration

 

Weaving

 

Ceramics

 

Lettering

 

Typography

 

Furniture

 

Glass

 

Stained Glass

 

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Title: Commercial Art

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: Commercial Art Ltd.

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1922-1926

 

Period covered by AHR net: 1922-1926

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Commercial Art was published by Commercial Art Ltd. in 5 volumes (42 issues) between October 1922 and June 1926. It was conceived as a trade journal for the British advertising industry and contains numerous, well-illustrated articles on posters, poster stamps, printing, typography, letter art, illustrations, signage, point-of-sale and window display, packaging, etc. Among artists whose work is discussed or illustrated in Commercial Art include E. McKnight Kauffer, Fred Taylor, Tom Purvis, Reginald Frampton, Jean d’Yllon, Austin Cooper. G.M. Ellwood, H.M. Bateman, Frank Brangwyn, Harold Nelson, Fred Pegram, E.A. Cox, Frank Newbould, Herrick, Aldo Cosmati, Charles Pears, Horace Taylor, Lovat Fraser, Anna and Doris Zinkeisen, Laurie Taylor, Septimus Scott, Rilette, F. Gregory Brown, Edmund J. Sullivan, George Sheringham, Robert Braun, Frederic W. Goudy, Paul E. Derrick, etc.

 

 

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Poster Design

 

Commercial Art

 

Advertising Design

 

Graphic Design

 

Typography

 

Lettering

 

Illustration

 

Packaging Design

 

Point-of-Sale Display

 

Retail Design

 

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Title: The Fleuron

 

Place of Publication: London, England England

 

Publisher: The Fleuron

 

Frequency: Annual

 

Period of Publication: 1923-1930

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Generally considered one of the most important British periodicals devoted to typography. Edited by the influential typographic consultants Oliver Simon and Stanley Morison, The Fleuron was the journal of the Fleuron Society, founded by Simon, Morison, Holbrook Jackson and Bernard Newdigate in London 1922. The journal soon achieved an international reputation for the quality of its articles, with contributions from many of the leading typographers, designers, and graphic artists. It contained articles on W.A. Dwiggins, Bruce Rogers, Claude Garamond, Eric Gill, Rudolf Koch, Karl Klingspor , 'The Typography of the 'Nineties', ‘On decorative printing in America’ , ‘Mr. C.H. St. John Hornby's Ashendene Press’. etc. See: Grant Shipcott. Typographical Periodicals Between the Wars: A Critique of The Fleuron, Signature and Typography. Oxford, England: Oxford Polytechnic Press, 1980

 

 

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Typography

 

Graphic Art

 

Graphic Design

 

Lettering

 

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Title: The Imprint

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: The Imprint Publishing Co.

 

Frequency: Monhly

 

Period of Publication: 1913

 

Period covered by AHR net: Numbers 1-9, 1913

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: The Imprint was a short-lived but seminal journal devoted to the arts of printing, typography, illustration and lettering. It was published in London between January and November 1913. The editors were the influential English typographic designers F. Ernest Jackson, Edward Johnston, J. H. Mason, and Gerard T. Meynell, who were assisted by an Advisory Committee of over 30 artists and individuals from the realms of art, printing and publishing that included Joseph Pennell, W.R. Lethaby, Douglas Cockerell, Arthur Waugh, F. Morley Fletcher, R.A. Austen-Leigh, and Sidney Colvin. The Imprint contains articles on Poster Advertising on the London Underground; Children’s Book Illustration by Walter Crane; Decorative Lettering by Edward Johnston; Art and Workmanship by W.R. Lethaby; Current Trends in Illustration by Joseph Pennell; the Wood Engravings of Lucien Pissarro by J.B. Manson; Liturgical Books by Stanley Morison; the 1913 Arts and Crafts Exhibition by B. Newdigate; Post-Impressionism, with some personal recollections of Vincent Van Gogh and Paul Gauguin, by A.S. Hartrick; Honoré Daumier by Frank Rinder; the International Colour Printing and Poster Exhibition of 1913; etc.

 

 

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Printing

 

Typography

 

Illustration

 

Book Design

 

Lithography

 

Graphic Design

 

Lettering

 

Poster Design

 

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Title: Industrial Arts

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: Bernard Jones Publications Ltd.

 

Frequency: Quarterly

 

Period of Publication: 1936

 

Period covered by AHR net: 1936

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Short-lived design journal – only four issues published. Contains articles by Eric Gill, Jan Tschichold, László Moholy-Nagy, Duncan Grant, Raymond Loewy, Norman Bel Geddes, Raymond McGrath, Xanti Schwawinsky, Laurelle Guild, Paul Bonet, Herbert Beyer, Eileen Hunter, Imre Reiner and others on streamlined transport, aluminium tableware, Surrealist bookbinding, modern decorative art in Sweden, the murals of Robert Delaunay, advertising art, the design of modern shops, sculpture on machine-made buildings, modern jewellery, the posters of Austin Cooper, abstract painting and the new typography, propaganda films, Italian industrial art schools, the use of glass in architecture, modern art glass, the Reimann School in London, the Royal Designer for Industry, humour for advertising, etc.

 

 

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Industrial Art and Design

 

Decorative Art and Design

 

Architecture

 

Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Textile Design

 

Furniture

 

Sculpture

 

Typography

 

Graphic Design

 

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Title: Jahrbuch Des Deutschen Werkbunde

 

Place of Publication: Munich: Berlin Germany

 

Publisher: Eugen Diederichs / Munich: F. Bruckmann / Berlin: Hermann Reckendorf

 

Frequency: Yearly

 

Period of Publication: 1912-1916/17, 1920

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: The yearbook of the Deutscher Werkbund (DWB) [founded 1907]. Volumes 1-5 of the yearbooks have the subtitle Jahrbuch des Deutschen Werkbundes; the subtitle of volume 6 is Jahrbücher des Deutschen Werkbundes. [There were no yearbooks issued in 1918 and 1919]. Membership of the DWB was open to architects and all active in the fields of design and the applied arts. The yearbooks contain a series of essays on recent developments in German design, followed by approximately 150-200 examples of representative work by members of the DWB. An exception to this format is the 1916-17 edition which was devoted to the design of war memorials and graves.

 

 

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Architecture

 

Interior Design and Decoration

 

Industrial Art and Design

 

Furniture

 

Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Metalwork

 

Lighting

 

Graphic Design

 

Typography

 

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