Polly Leonard on the topic of craft
You have to be careful about craft.
My husband steps on the brakes and searches for a parking space; he has seen a handwritten sign ‘Craft Fair Today’ on the entrance to a church hall we pass on the road. I protest that although it is a nice thought not all craft is created equal. I love craft and of course would travel miles to find a gem.
The problem is the word Craft. It is just too general – encompassing everything from Alison Morton’s exquisite hand woven linen tea towels to something produced as a response to Kirstie Allsopp’s have-a-go manifesto, and everything in between.
Craft is skilled work and has nothing to do with design. In Japan an apprentice would spend years acquiring skills from a master. There is no expectation to create original work before the technique had been mastered to a level that might be achieved after ten thousand hours. Master craftsmen are in turn honoured by becoming a Living National Treasure.
In the West, particularly the UK, this idea is turned on its head – we teach students as young as fourteen to think creatively and develop an idea through to a conclusion, with the intention that they will pick up the necessary skills during their personal creative journey. To an extent this works. We have great creative minds. I am thinking of the likes of Ptolemy Mann, who as well as a virtuoso weaver is also a talented designer and has the ability to apply her creativity to a range of problems.
However, on a rudimentary level creativity is the easy bit. Almost anyone can make something, as the popularity of online craft marketplaces testifies. It is with sadness, though, that I note textiles suffer from the ‘design without skill’ scenario more than other disciplines; probably because the financial investment necessary to knit a scarf is less than that needed to say throw a pot. The problem with the lexicology is further complicated by the anonymous craftsmen who use their sophisticated skills to produce products whose design is either dictated by others or inherited from cultural history.
Of course, when craft is combined with design it becomes cool; in urban centres such as Shoreditch the keyboard has been replaced by the workbench to startling effect. New galleries re-present old crafts for a new affluent audience, and craft fairs fill every weekend. At its best craft is often quiet – it does not shout like design, and this partly accounts for its struggle. Take another look at Alison Morton’s tea towels. The Scandinavian aesthetic is not afraid of this silence and that is why they sit more comfortably with this genre.
So how do we categorise craft? I am struck by the low status of craft in schools as opposed to say music – this may provide the key. A student studying an instrument will have a one to one lesson each week, is expected to practice half an hour every day and is tested once a year. The Associate Board of the Royal School of Music has produced a system of grading that tests knowledge and skill in a specific discipline. Something similar for craft may provide a solution.
So to satisfy our curiosity we pay the entrance fee and cruise the stalls at the Craft Fair in search of that elusive gem.
Ptolemy Mann will be exhibiting at Selvedge's Artisan Fair
3 – 4 December
Chelsea Old Town Hall
Images featured: Alison Morton
14 comments
So many of your comments support my thinking too. Here I am in Australia and this dilemma is with me every day. As a highly skilled dressmaker making beautiful clothing for brides and ladies who seek personal style in fashion, I lament the lack of education in this skill.
How wonderful to read an article and comments that are so spot on and I agree with all that has been written.
The situation here in Australia is very much the same. Every other country town has its ‘craft ’ shop which are usually full of what I describe as bad craft. Crocheted toilet roll covers in pastel nylon, baby clothes knitted in acrylic, bags and other items made from left over coated curtain fabric, and my particular favourite for awfulness are towelling tea towels with a crocheted ’handle ’ to button on to your towel rail.
These shops are usually affiliated to a church or community group and are run by our very senior citizens and while it is fantastic that people are still knitting, crocheting, or doing woodwork in their 80’s and 90’s and the work is sometimes exquisite they are made in cheap man made fibres and dreadful colours.
We have a chain of barn like fabric, haberdashery and craft supply stores so the raw materials are readily available ( far more so than in the UK ) but they sell budget quality goods and so this is of course what is used.
On the plus side we also have far more quilting shops than the UK so good quality fabric is available and while we have world class quilters (and textile artists) the majority are content to follow a design from a quilting magazine.
Fabrics of all description and particularly furnishing fabric is very much cheaper than in the UK, closer to China maybe.
A gripe for another blog… Selling polyester 80’s clothes as vintage.
Keep up the conversation Polly and Selvedge
I am not informed enough to comment on how craft is taught in our schools but I think textiles is thought in a very limited and desultory manner.
A correction to my above comments. The last line should of course read taught and not thought.
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