Publisher's Synopsis
A beautifully illustrated and extensively researched collection of 100 exquisite houses of the Arts and Crafts Movement. The Arts and Crafts Movement produced some of the world's most charming and enduring architectural masterpieces. Author and architect David Cole presents 100 great houses of Arts and Crafts domestic architecture (1860-1914), each house individually described and analysed with insightful detail and illustrated with stunning photography. Cole tells the story of the shifts and influences within the Arts and Crafts Movement through the lens of 100 houses, from those by the pioneer and great reformer architects, to the countryside craftsmen and Scottish architects, and finally the houses of the Garden Cities. He dedicates a short chapter to each of the 100 great Arts and Crafts houses, beginning with the iconic Red House, designed and owned by William Morris, a pioneer and key proponent of the Arts and Crafts Movement. In addition to Morris, the book features houses created by some forty of the movement's renowned architects, including Philip Webb, Richard Norman Shaw, Wiliam Lethaby, C.F.A. Voysey, Edwin Lutyens. This extensively researched and exquisitely produced large-volume book presents the Arts and Crafts Movement's 100 most important houses, illustrated with more than 900 full-colour photographs. As Morris famously said, "Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.".