Annual Conference Explores Rose Valley, Esherick Museum & Brandywine Valley

by Kate Nixon

 

Arts and Crafts collectors and enthusiasts have the chance to visit the natural beauty of the Brandywine River Valley in Pennsylvania October 13th – 17th during the Initiatives in Art & Culture’s annual Arts & Crafts Conference.

IAC’s 26th annual Arts & Crafts Conference will visit the Brandywine River Valley to consider its regional importance in the American Arts & Crafts Movement. “As has been our practice since the beginning, we will explore the artistic and philosophical underpinnings of the Movement and how it informed the art and architecture that followed,” writes Lisa Koenigsberg, President of IAC. “Key to this consideration are the commonalities in ethos and approach among different practitioners and how the Movement continues, reflected in contemporary culture in ways both original and nonmimetic… The Conference will underscore the importance of preservation and of the continuing influence of historic architecture in the contemporary urban and suburban landscapes.”

 

Wharton Esherick’s Home and Studio from the West. Photo credit: Charles Uniatowski.

 

Attendees will have the opportunity to tour the following sites:

  • The work and legacy of Esherick as well as the artistic milieu in which he trained at the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Art (PAFA).
  • The Arts & Crafts community of Rose Valley, the milieu in which Esherick practiced. Founded in 1901 by William Lightfoot Price and modeled on the utopian English village described by William Morris in News from Nowhere, the community features impressive architecture, a preserved landscape, and the Hedgerow Theatre.
  • The George Nakashima House, Studio and Workshop. George Nakashima began his furniture business in 1945 as a reaction to “20th-century modern,” with the goal of reclaiming the philosophy of periods past in which the maker’s eye and hand determined his world in relation to the universe. The conference will be welcomed by his daughter, Mira Nakashima.
  • Other major expressions of the Movement that flourished in the region, among them the work of The Red Rose Girls, a group of young female artists in Philadelphia whose legacy straddles the Movement and early 20th-century feminism.
  • The work and influence of NC Wyeth, muralist and illustrator, and his son Andrew whose paintings and watercolors captured a particular sense of place. Both artists’ studios will be visited, as well as those of other artists and craftsmen participating in or influenced by the Movement in the Philadelphia region.
  • The contributions of Henry Chapman Mercer, a leading artistic tile maker of the Movement, whose legacy continues at the Moravian Pottery & Tile Works.
  • The Michener Art Museum, where in addition to its major collection of American Art, attendees will be able to view the institution’s significant holdings of the regional frame maker Bernard Badura.
  • Vital architectural sites relating to the Movement or its ongoing expressions, such as Frank Lloyd Wright’s Beth Sholom Synagogue in Elkins Park and Louis Kahn’s residential commission for Margeret Esherick.

 

Click here to register for the IAC Conference