Aestheticism

From 1860 to 1900, a group of artists, architects and designers in Britain found themselves united in the search for a new beauty. The Aesthetic Movement aimed to create a new kind of art, an art freed from outworn establishment ideas and Victorian notions of morality. This was to be 'Art for Art's sake' – art that didn't tell stories or make moral points, art that dared simply to offer visual delight and hint at sensuous pleasure.

Features

Collection highlights

  1. screen
    Screen, designed by William Eden Nesfield, made by James Forsyth, 1867, London, England
    V&A South Kensington
    On display
  2. vase
    Vases, designed by Edward William Godwin and William Watt, about 1877, England
    V&A South Kensington
    On display
  3. watercolour
    An Open Book, watercolour, by Albert Moore, about 1884, London, England
    V&A South Kensington
    View by appointment
  4. brooch and hair ornaments in case
    Brooch and hair ornaments, designed by Carlo Giuliano, 1885, London, England
    V&A South Kensington
    On display
  5. teapot
    Teapot, designed by Christopher Dresser, made by James Dixon and Sons, about 1879, Sheffield, England
    V&A South Kensington
    On display
  6. oil painting
    Mrs Luke Ionides (1848-1929), oil painting, by William Blake Richmond, 1882, Britain
    V&A South Kensington
    On display
  7. drawing
    Siegfried, Act II, drawing, by Aubrey Vincent Beardsley, about 1892 – 93, England
    V&A South Kensington
    Not on display
  8. songsheet cover
    Quite too Utterly Utter, songsheet cover, by Alfred Concanen, printed by Stannard & Son, about 1881, Britain
    V&A East Storehouse
    View by appointment
  9. wallpaper design
    Fruit, wallpaper design, designed by William Morris and Philip Webb, 1862, London. England
    V&A South Kensington
    Not on display
  10. furnishing fabric
    Peacock Feathers, furnishing fabric, designed by Arthur Silver, made for Liberty & Co., 1887, London, England
    V&A East Storehouse
    View by appointment
  11. plate
    Plate, made by Brown-Westhead, Moore & Co., about 1875 – 85, Cauldron, England
    V&A South Kensington
    On display
  12. vase
    The Day Dream, oil painting, by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1880, England
    V&A South Kensington
    On display
  13. vase
    Vase, made by Elkington & Co., 1876, Birmingham, England
    V&A South Kensington
    View by appointment
  14. book
    Design for a book cover for Oscar Wilde's The Sphinx, by Charles Ricketts, 1884, Britain
    V&A South Kensington
    View by appointment

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Header image:
Swan, Rush and Iris, design for wallpaper, Walter Crane, 1875, England. Museum no. E.17-1945. © Victoria and Albert Museum, London