Designing Women Post-War British Textiles – Fashion And Textile Museum, London

Mauve by Marian Mahler

Yesterday, a forthcoming exhibition at the Fashion and Textile Museum opening to the public. Britain was at the forefront of international textile design in the 1950s and 1960s. Three women – Lucienne Day, Jacqueline Groag and Marian Mahler – led this movement. Designing Women explores their pioneering role in combining art and manufacturing to change the direction of the modern design industry.

White Cottage Garden With Pink Trees

The art of textile design radically changed after the Second World War and the drab days of the War were transformed by the fresh, progressive designs of those three women artists working in England in the 1950s, pivotal in this artistic revolution.

Miscellany

Designing Women: Post-war British textiles showcases their work beginning with Lucienne Day’s ‘Calyx’ pattern of 1951, featured at the Festival of Britain, and moving through textile commissions of the 1960s and 70s featuring more than 100 works altogether.

Chevron by Lucienne Day

Original artist designs with bold abstract pattern, as well as the use of saturated colour, marked a dramatic departure from conventional furnishing fabrics. This new wave of bold textile designs, helped to bring the influences of the art world, in its most recent, refreshing, and largely abstract forms, into the contemporary home.

Mobiles Grey by Marian Mahler

Progressive textile manufacturers and wholesale firms like Heal & Sons and David Whitehead Ltd were central in maintaining Britain’s preeminent position in textile design. The introduction of new technologies and the work of inventive and creative young designers like Day, Groag and Mahler helped these companies transform the market by inspiring new product lines that were elegant and artistic, yet affordable.

Nautilus Yellow by M. Warren

The mid-century pursuit of fresh and provocative designs is reflected in the work of other women designers who produced popular textiles of the period. The work of Paule Vézelay, Mary Warren and Mary White is also included in the exhibition. Together they present a uniquely British brand of modernism whose broad appeal is still relevant to contemporary domestic interiors today.

Traffic Lights by Jacqueline Groag

Celia Joicey, Head of Fashion and Textile Museum, says ‘We are very excited to be showing the work of Lucienne Day, Marian Mahler and Jacqueline Groag at the Fashion and Textile Museum. Their outstanding designs highlight the important contribution these women have made to introducing art and modernity into British lives and homes.’

Pebbles Red by Jacqueline Groag

Dennis Nothdruft, Curator, says ‘The mid-century textiles collection of Jill A. Wiltse and H. Kirk Brown is one of the most comprehensive in the world. This exhibition will provide a rare opportunity to see these works and compare key developments in pattern, colour and form from this period.’

Olive Cayl by Lucienne Day

Open from 16th March – 16th June 2012