The Blockhouse of Boston was a pioneering art and design cooperative of alumni from the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston, Massachusetts that opened its doors in 1947. [1] Blockhouse artisans, primarily the then-recent art school graduate Janet Doub Erickson, designed and produced original textiles including draperies, wall hangings, table linens, costume treatments and other art. The co-op specialized in linoleum blockprints — also known as linocuts — and screen printing. Blockhouse was known for original use of New England themes and motifs intermingled with bold ethnic designs [2] at times inspired by pre-Columbian art and sometimes with modernist motifs. [3] As a journalist described some of Blockhouse principal designer Janet Doub Erickson's inspirations in a 1952 profile, "she goes to New Guinea for her motif, 'Checkerboard,' to China for her "Quan-Yin" design, to Guatemala for "Mayan Stele," and to a Northwest Indian reservation for "Totemotif." [4]
Quite often, however, she just stayed home, looking for inspiration in the architecture and history of Boston and surrounding towns in New England.
Founded in 1947 by twelve students and alumni of the Massachusetts College of Art, [6] Blockhouse sought to “provide artists the opportunity to establish a dignified and mutually profitable relationship with the buying public.” The founders described Blockhouse's mission as follows:
"Blockhouse hand-printed fabrics are the product of a group of artists searching for a new and socially useful outlet for the expression of their talents. We hope that our designs conceived in freshness of vision and executed with technical skill, will contribute to and stimulate interest in contemporary design as it develops toward a universal idiom."
Originally located at a gallery in the Oceanside Hotel and Casino on Lexington Avenue in Magnolia, Massachusetts, [7] then Cambridge Street in Boston, as Blockhouse became more successful the cooperative moved to occupy a floor of 10 Arlington Avenue overlooking Boston Common.
In the beginning, the Blockhouse had two small apartments, one for male members and another for females, where the artists could live dormitory-style at virtually no cost and work in the studio on the premises. [8] The original members paid five dollars each to self-fund the cooperative's initial expense renting a space.
As reported in the Boston Globe, "all chores were shared. No one drew a salary. To earn money a member had to design and print. When an article was sold 70 percent of the proceeds went to the designer, the rest to the Block-house fund. Prices were set low for handiwork - as little as $5 a yard for drape material - in order to reach as wide a market as possible." [9]
Blockhouse artists were responsible for every step in production of their designs. This traditional handicraft method, while slowing and limiting production, assured them control to carry their ideas undistorted into the final pieces. In addition to acting as a center for artists, the Blockhouse also taught classes in silk screen and block printing, ceramics, sketching and painting in watercolor and oil.
Over time, the Blockhouse evolved away from its utopian beginnings to become a more commercially focused enterprise. Of the founders, only partners Janet Doub Erickson and Paul Coombs remained active until Blockhouse's closing in 1955 [10] and Janet Doub Erickson's subsequent departure for Mexico to pursue other artistic projects.
In addition to its innovative designs, which repeatedly won its designers awards and national recognition, Blockhouse's significance was bolstered by its use of post-war marketing techniques to move artistically innovative work into the broader New England and national marketplace through the synthesis of traditional techniques, diverse designs, and modern guerrilla marketing tactics. From 1947 to 1955, when it closed its doors, the work of Blockhouse was featured in Life , [11] Vogue [12] The New Yorker , [13] The New York Times , [14] Harper's Bazaar , [15] The Christian Science Monitor , Women's Wear Daily , [16] the Boston Globe [17] and numerous other regional publications.
Designs from the Blockhouse collection were reproduced in commercial volumes by Wesley Simpson, Inc., Stoffel and Company, Strauss & Mueller, J.H. Thorp, Arundell Clarke, M. Lowenstein Sons, Century Sportswear and The Boka Company. Blockhouse textiles penetrated the larger culture through their popularity with commercial advertisers.
The Blockhouse also sought to penetrate the citadels of high culture. Blockhouse works were featured in exhibitions at Harvard's Fogg Museum, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. [18] Blockhouse work also appeared at the Addison Gallery of American Art, the Wadsworth Atheneum, the Farnsworth Art Museum, the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, and other galleries across the country.
The United States State Department included Blockhouse textiles in international exhibitions that toured in Europe and Israel during the nineteen-fifties. [19]
After Blockhouse disbanded members scattered about New England and other areas of the United States, producing art and teaching Blockhouse-style textile and artistic design through the country. Surviving Blockhouse textiles are mainly in the hands of private collectors and galleries.
Blockhouse was founded and led by Paul Coombs and Janet Doub Erickson, both recent graduates of the Massachusetts College of Art. Coombs was a veteran of the two world wars who became interested in art while recovering in the hospital from an injury sustained in the Pacific Rim. [20] Considerably older than his partners, he focused on the commercialization of Blockhouse designs and managed the business side of Blockhouse, although he also contributed original designs.
Other founding members included Elaine Biganess and David Berger.
Janet Doub Erickson was founding partner, chief designer, and head of production. She was credited with producing ninety percent of the Blockhouse's designs. [21] Among honors, awards, and recognitions over her professional life, at Blockhouse she was the second young Boston artist chosen for recognition by the Institute of Contemporary Art and was profiled in a 1951 issue of Life [22] She would go on to author popular books on blockprinting, including Printmaking Without A Press (Reinhold 1966) [23] and Block Printing on Textiles (Watson-Guptill 1961). [24] She taught block printing in Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, California, and elsewhere over her long career after Blockhouse. Her enthusiastic promotion of block printing was influential in its post-war artistic renaissance. Later in life she wrote on textile design and vernacular architecture and published another book of her line drawings of Boston during the Blockhouse period.
Eight other artists joined Blockhouse but were less active in design, production, and commercialization.
Linocut, also known as lino print, lino printing or linoleum art, is a printmaking technique, a variant of woodcut in which a sheet of linoleum is used for a relief surface. A design is cut into the linoleum surface with a sharp knife, V-shaped chisel or gouge, with the raised (uncarved) areas representing a reversal of the parts to show printed. The linoleum sheet is inked with a roller, and then impressed onto paper or fabric. The actual printing can be done by hand or with a printing press.
Wearable art, also known as Artwear or "art to wear", refers to art pieces in the shape of clothing or jewellery pieces. These pieces are usually handmade, and are produced only once or as a very limited series. Pieces of clothing are often made with fibrous materials and traditional techniques such as crochet, knitting, quilting, but may also include plastic sheeting, metals, paper, and more. While the making of any article of clothing or other wearable object typically involves aesthetic considerations, the term wearable art implies that the work is intended to be accepted as an artistic creation or statement. Wearable art is meant to draw attention while it is being displayed, modeled or used in performances. Pieces may be sold and exhibited.
Lyubov Sergeyevna Popova was a Russian-Soviet avant-garde artist, painter and designer.
Varvara Fyodorovna Stepanova was a Russian artist. With her husband Alexander Rodchenko, she was associated with the Constructivist branch of the Russian avant-garde, which rejected aesthetic values in favour of revolutionary ones. Her activities extended into propaganda, poetry, stage scenery and textile designs.
The Folly Cove Designers were a mid-20th-century group of American artists block printing in Gloucester, Massachusetts, on Cape Ann. Their blocks were made of linoleum, and they primarily printed on fabric.
Virginia Lee Burton, also known by her married name Virginia Demetrios, was an American illustrator and children's book author. She wrote and illustrated seven children's books, including Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel (1939) and The Little House (1943), which won the Caldecott Medal. She also illustrated six books by other authors.
Muriel Cooper was a pioneering book designer, digital designer, researcher, and educator. She was the first design director of the MIT Press, instilling a Bauhaus-influenced design style into its many publications. She moved on to become founder of MIT's Visible Language Workshop, and later became a co-founder of the MIT Media Lab. In 2007, a New York Times article called her "the design heroine you've probably never heard of".
The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation was founded in 1918 by Louis Comfort Tiffany to operate his estate, Laurelton Hall, in Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island. It was designed to be a summer retreat for artists and craftspeople. In 1946 the estate closed and the foundation changed its purpose from a retreat to the bestowing of grants to artists.
John Henry Dearle was a British textile and stained-glass designer trained by the artist and craftsman William Morris who was much influenced by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Dearle designed many of the later wallpapers and textiles released by Morris & Co., and contributed background and foliage patterns to tapestry designs featuring figures by Edward Burne-Jones and others. Beginning in his teens as a shop assistant and then design apprentice, Dearle rose to become Morris & Co.'s chief designer by 1890, creating designs for tapestries, embroidery, wallpapers, woven and printed textiles, stained glass, and carpets. Following Morris's death in 1896, Dearle was appointed Art Director of the firm, and became its principal stained glass designer on the death of Burne-Jones in 1898.
Janet Ann Doub Erickson was an American graphic artist and writer who popularized linoleum-block and woodblock printing in the post-World War II period. She was a co-founder of the Blockhouse of Boston, an innovative art and design cooperative in Boston, Massachusetts. In the preface to her influential book, Block Printing on Textiles, the publisher of a leading arts education magazine noted that, "more than anyone else in America today, Janet Doub Erickson has lifted a craft that had become dull, dead, and dated to a position where we can see its challenging possibilities in the creative renaissance we are now experiencing.”
Enid Crystal Dorothy Marx, RDI, was an English painter and designer, best known for her industrial textile designs for the London Transport Board and the Utility furniture Scheme. Marx was the first female engraver to be designated as a Royal Designer for Industry.
Winchester High School is a comprehensive 9–12 high school located in Winchester, Massachusetts, United States. Founded in 1850, it moved into its current location in the spring of 1972. Ranked 29th among Massachusetts High Schools, close to 98% of students graduated in 2016, with about 96% of those continuing to higher education.
Katherine Westphal was an American textile designer and fiber artist who helped to establish quilting as a fine art form.
Ilonka Karasz, was a Hungarian-American designer and illustrator known for avant-garde industrial design and for her many New Yorker magazine covers.
Helena Hernmarck is a Swedish tapestry artist who lives and works in the United States. She is best known for her monumental tapestries designed for architectural settings.
Laura Coombs Hills (1859–1952) was an American artist and illustrator who specialized in watercolor and pastel still life paintings, especially of flowers, and miniature portrait paintings on ivory. She became the first miniature painter elected to the Society of American Artists, and she was a founder of the American Society of Miniature Painters. She also worked as a designer and illustrated children's books for authors such as Kate Douglas Wiggin and Anna M. Pratt.
Lillian Grace Delevoryas was an American artist whose career spanned six decades. Trained in Fine Art, Calligraphy and Woodblock printing she initially achieved recognition during the 1970s for her pioneering work in appliqué and tapestry for the fashion and interior design industries. In the 1980s this recognition led to commissions for commercial applications over a range of consumer products, most notably pottery, textile and paper. Since the 1990s, Delevoryas returned to painting and continued to exhibit and promote her work. She lived in the UK since the early 1970s and was married to the writer and poet Robin Amis.
Mabel Phyllis Barron was an English designer, known for her textile printing workshop with Dorothy Larcher. These textiles are ‘noted for the assurance and originality of the designs, their distinctive and subtle colouring, and the quality of the materials selected’
Dorothy Larcher (1884–1952) was an English designer of textiles, known for the printing workshops she shared with Phyllis Barron in Hampstead (1923–1930) and Painswick, Gloucestershire (1930–1940).
Ruth Adler Schnee was a German-born American textile designer and interior designer based in Michigan. Schnee was best known for her modern prints and abstract-patterns of organic and geometric forms. She opened the Ruth Adler-Schnee Design Studio with her spouse Edward Schnee in Detroit, which operated until 1960. The studio produced textiles and later branched off into Adler-Schnee Associates home decor, interiors, and furniture.