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Presentation Study Collection

A Shot of Rhythm and Color

English Textile Design of the late 19th Century
Wed, 06.02.2013–Sun, 13.10.2013

MAK Textiles Study Collection

The Collection of Textiles and Carpets at the MAK is home to an unusually large group of around 900 English textile and wallpaper samples from the period before and around 1900. This exhibition focuses on these textiles while also providing a look at contemporaneous arts and crafts output in other materials.

19th-century England was not just a political and technological leader, but also drove forward the development of new forms for its own products. The establishment of the “imperial Royal Austrian Museum of Art and industry” in Vienna, today’s MAK, was a clear demonstration of England’s influence. The museum in Vienna was intended to encourage domestic production and enrich its formal repertoire by compiling and showing a collection of models.

The increasing industrialization of 19th-century England saw commensurate growth of the middle class. This market was served via the mass production of affordable textiles, the stylistic sophistication of which increased considerably during the century’s second half.

The Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society, founded in 1887, mounted presentations of modern arts and crafts that saw the participation of artists such as William Morris, Walter Crane and Charles f. A. Voysey, whose works are also shown in this exhibition. The style that was then subsumed under the term “Arts and Crafts” embodied a reaction to the aesthetic and economic development of midcentury English output.

The MAK acquired contemporary textiles from England in the late 19th century and presented numerous panels in an exhibition together with contemporary examples from Belgium, france, and italy as early as 1899. Viennese artists and tradespeople, as is shown prominently in the new Vienna 1900 exhibit of the MAK Permanent Collection, were thus given the opportunity to get acquainted with and take inspiration from innovative, Englishdesigned products even prior to 1900.

This exhibition is accompanied by the launch of a database presenting the MAK’s entire collection of English textiles and wallpaper. It offers the opportunity to become more familiar with and study these rich holdings, and the varied patterns to be found there can also serve as inspiration for a wide range of interests and occasions.

Curator Barbara Karl, Curator, MAK Textiles and Carpets Collection

Exhibition folder download


Educational program and events
unless otherwise mentioned, in German

Expert guided tours

Fri, 8.3.2013, 4 p.m.
with Barbara Karl, Curator, MAK Textiles and Carpets Collection
(free admission on the occasion of the international Women’s day)

Thu, 18.4.2013, 5 p.m.
"Adolf Loos and Great Britain in the context of LOOS: Contemporary
and A Shot of Rhythm and Color. English Textile design of the
late 19th Century
" with Barbara Karl, Curator, MAK Textiles and Carpets Collection together with Rainald Franz, Curator, MAK Glass and Ceramics Collection

Thu, 19.9.2013, 5 p.m.
"A Shot of Rhythm and Color"
with Barbara Karl, Curator, MAK Textiles and Carpets Collection

Special guided tours by advance registration
Gabriele Fabiankowitsch,  head of MAK Educational Program and Guided Tours,
T +43 1 711 36-298,

MAK SENIORS

Wed, 17.4.2013, 3 p.m.
with Gabriele Fabiankowitsch, head of MAK Educational Program and Guided Tours
Followed by further discussion at the restaurant ÖSTERREICHER IM MAK.
Total price € 12.
Advance registration required: T +43 1 711 36-298,
Meeting point: MAK Cash Desk, Stubenring 5, Vienna 1

MAK4FAMILY

Sat, 25.5.2013, 2–5 p.m.
„Flower Idea Workshop: We’ll make over a hundred flowers bloom . . . on paper and cloth““
Advance booking required, T +43 1 711 36-298,

MINI MAK

Sun, 15.9.2013, 11 a.m.
„Giant flowers and little people—can we do this too?““
Advance booking required, T +43 1 711 36-298,



Part of the exhibits will be integrated in the EU-funded project Partage Plus– Digitising and Enabling Art Nouveau for Europeana:

This two-year EU project is dedicated to the scholarly research and digitization of selected Art Nouveau-era objects, ultimately providing online access to the public via Europeana, a multi-media Open Access data base dedicated to the collection and publication of European cultural assets. The MAK, as one of 23 participating institutions from all over Europe, thus has been offered a unique opportunity to publicize its valuable and extensive holdings from this era—in particular works by artists from the Wiener Werkstätte and the Secession like Josef Hoffmann, Koloman Moser, or Gustav Klimt. In the course of this project a total of 4,600 objects from the MAK’s collections, including objects presented in the current exhibitions „A Shot of Rhythm and Color“ and „Vienna 1900“, will be researched, digitized and published online until early 2014.

(Partage Plus is funded by the Commission’s ICT Policy Support Programme as part of the Competitiveness and Innovation Framework Programme)

www.partage-plus.eu
www.europeana.eu
                      


 

Opening Hours

Tue 10 a.m.–10 p.m.
Wed–Sun 10 a.m.–6 p.m.
Mon closed
Free Admission on
Tuesdays 6–10 p.m.

Admission

€ 7,90 / reduced € 5,50
Free admission for children and teens up to 19

Free Admission on
Tuesdays 6–10 p.m.
 
Family ticket € 11 (2 adults and at least one child under 14)
 

Guided Tours

MAK TOURS – every Saturday at 11 a.m. a tour through the MAK in German; every Sunday at noon in English.
Attendance fee € 2 per person, except children under 6
 

Special and Group Tours

by advance booking
Gabriele Fabiankowitsch, Head of Educational Program and Guided Tours
T +43 1 711 36-298
(Mon–Fri 10 a.m.–4 p.m.),

 

Barrier Free Access

Lift at the entrance at Weiskirchnerstraße 3, accessible toilets for disabled visitors.

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