Page 169 - Constructing Craft
P. 169
Chipping Campden community. Photo: Cambridge University Press.
The community survived until 1908, when it went into liquidation. Ashbee was
initially convinced that the move to the country was responsible for the demise of
the Guild. Later, however, he added competition from machine production and from
amateurs. Both issues became the bêtes noires of the studio craft movement, but
the countryside as the ideal location for craft workshops remained an important
principle for many craftspeople. A trust replaced the Guild. In the trust deed, crafts
and craftsmanship were defined as ‘all such occupations with the hand, with or
without the assistance of machinery, as are not usually carried on in large factories
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in towns’. The inclusion of ‘machinery’ and the exclusion of ‘large factories’ in the
charter recognised Ashbee’s inclusive but controlled approach to technology.
Between the Wars
Nostalgia for life in ‘the ‘traditional’ English countryside was widespread across all
sectors of British society between the wars, based largely on the middle-class fears
that ‘cultural standards’ were being undermined in the industrialised cities. Craft was
thought to be an integral and important part of the rural economy. Those who hoped
to preserve the rural way of life employed craft to a greater or lesser extent
depending on their interest in craft per se. For example, after he returned to Britain
in 1920 from a long period of study in Japan, Bernard Leach set up a studio pottery
in St Ives in Cornwall. The type of village pottery he had seen in Japan inspired him
Constructing Craft