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Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals

March 5, 2009


Christopher Dresser’s tin candle holder and watering can for Perry & Son’s, 1880.

Christopher Dresser (1834-1904) cut a wide swath across 19th-century culture and commerce. In a career spanning 50 years, he wrote and lectured about botany and ornament, and produced an array of designs in areas as diverse as furniture, dinnerware, glass, ceramics, silver, textiles, and wallpaper. Hugely successful and influential in his day, he was nonetheless marginalized after his death by a design press that all but lionized William Morris.

Reassessment was slow to take place, and focused on the proto-modernist aspects of his work, specifically on the geometric and austere silver designs of the 1870’s and 1880’s. Nicholas Pevsner devoted all of one paragraph to Dresser in his 1936 Pioneers of the Modern Movement, citing a pair of silver cruets for their startling simplicity of form. Herwin Schaefer similarly mentioned Dresser in passing in Nineteeth Century Modern (1970), again focusing solely on the prescient modernity of the silver designs for Hukin & Heath and Dixon & Sons. Only in the past twenty years has a fuller and more balanced picture of Dresser emerged. Notable here are the monographs by Widar Halen (1990) and Stuart Durant (1993), and the 2004 exhibition catalog Shock of the Old: Christopher Dresser’s Design RevolutionThese accounts have in common an attempt to illustrate the range of Dresser’s work, and to relocate Dresser as a Victorian thinker and creator, as much a man of his day as ahead of it.


Silver-plated teapot for James Dixon & Sons, c. 1880.

Still, in all these writings the astonishing silver designs take center stage. Executed after his epochal trip to Japan in 1877, the silver and silver-plated teapots, decanters, tureens, and toast racks look to our eyes more like Bauhaus or post-modern objects than like Victorian things. They represent a body of work unrivalled in the 19th century, and still relevant in the 21st century—original examples can fetch in excess of $100,000, and Alessi recently re-issued a series of Dresser designs.


Pewter pitcher and tin candleholder for Perry & Sons.

Lost amidst the fanfare for the silver design is Dresser’s work in tin, copper, and brass. Generally, the designs in these humble metals are treated as poor cousins to the silver designs, and they garner less print and fewer illustrations in the literature. To some extent, this is because less is known about this work, including which designs Dresser himself was responsible for. Still, there is no doubt that in the 1870’s and 80’s Dresser’s office did work in copper and brass for Benham & Froud, and in tin, copper, and brass for Perry & Sons of Wolverhampton. The latter company in particular has attracted my attention, and I have over the years examined 20-25 different Perry & Sons designs that I would attribute to Dresser, and I would guess there are at least as many more still out there. I have collected about a dozen examples, six of which are illustrated here.

 
Brass pitcher and tin candleholder for Perry & Sons.

What unites and identifies Dresser’s work for Perry & Sons is what separates it from most Victorian design—the interplay of geometric forms, the origami-like foldings, the bold use of color, and the lack of superficial ornament. The low cost of the materials, combined with the relative ease of working them, allowed a tangible freedom of expression not present in the silver work. The tin (and brass) candle holders and watering cans convey a sense of delight and exuberance; they are inexpensive but confident works that make a bold and progressive visual statement.

I would suggest that the Dresser design team’s tin pieces for Perry were to the late 19th century what the Nelson design team’s clocks for Howard Miller were to the 1950’s—the output of a laboratory for creative experiment and design-play, and a proving ground for new shapes and forms. Yet, before we rip Dresser out of his Victorian milieu, we should point out, as one wag did, that while Dresser was designing forward-looking tin candle holders, Edison was inventing light bulbs.

Posted by Larry Weinberg on March 5, 2009 | Comments (10)
Industries: Accessories

October 24, 2009
In response to: Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals
kordoFan commented:

Contemporary reports on Hukin & Heath silver plate were that they were no more expensive than the traditional models they replaced, although of course decorated items would have been the more expensive versions for those who could afford them. Glad you asked about Dresser's electric lamps cos he's sure to have designed them. Did Edison? Look forward to your ornmental blog.


October 13, 2009
In response to: Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals
LPW commented:

Good points. Note, however, that Dresser's silver designs were not particularly affordable, though more so with sterling than plate? The Edison remark has to do with technological paradigms displacing design series--what could Dresser have done with electic lighting? Ornament in modern design is a big picture topic; in Dresser, the subject of appropriate ornament will be the topic of a future blog. Thanks for bringing this up.


October 13, 2009
In response to: Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals
kordoFan commented:

What power of expression. Agree with all you say,excepting the red herring about Edison the inventor, not designer. DrD must have been good 'cos the U.S. gov. asked Dresser to report on household design, and the Japanese gov. on trade with Europe. The Studio described him as an unrecognized genius despite being a household name. Not only did he outperform Morris in wallpaper, textile and carpet design-Morris only produced flat design-he produced designs for 3D objects such as the Perry you show. His designs were affordable -art for the masses- whereas Morris chose to be expensive. But surely we should extend our appreciation to include his ornamentation of which we hear so little? Ornament is modern too.Modern carpet wallpaper and textiles are not all plain are they?


March 12, 2009
In response to: Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals
LPW commented:

There has been a lot of attention paid to Dresser in the past 20 years--monographs, articles, museum exhibitions, and gallery shows. You can track some of this down in a good library, such as the Cooper-Hewitt, which hosted the Shock of the Old show. It can be difficult to assign Dresser's authorship to a piece not found in the literature, though. You'll need to look for a preponderance of elements, rather than, say, just a turned wooden handle, which in itself could be a borrowing from traditional praxis. Also, Dresser was influential, and his ideas were emulated or copied in his day. You can try posting an image and a query on some design forums, such as designaddict.com or one of the antiques magazines. You can also send me an image at info@4pmny.com and I'll see what I can deduce.


March 12, 2009
In response to: Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals
r.lewis commented:

hello i have a teapot which i had appraised recently,it has no marks or stamps,the appraiser said he thought it could be Dresser,but can't find any further info,anyone have an idea of where i could find out more about the teapot.


March 5, 2009
In response to: Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals
naretev@mac.com commented:

I can't believe the silver plated tea pot above was designed in 1880. It looks like it's from the 1920's...


March 5, 2009
In response to: Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals
Design Outsider commented:

I was introduced to Dresser's work in the November '08 issue of Interior Design. Thanks for the fascinating back story. It's good to know that great design is timeless.


March 5, 2009
In response to: Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals
Marty commented:

Excellent piece. Well Researched. Wasn't aware of most of what you said, thanks.


March 5, 2009
In response to: Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals
InteriorDesign.net commented:

Hi, Jayne. Unfortunately, we don't have Facebook sharing capability for our blog posts yet, but stay tuned!


March 5, 2009
In response to: Tin Man: Christopher Dresser’s Work in Humble Metals
jayne michaels commented:

Dreser was way ahead of his time. Excellent piece. For the technical crew - I want to post this on my facebook profile but there doesn't seem to be a way to do this on this site..or is there? Thanks.

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