- A. H. Mackmurdo
[
thumb|right|Bookcover_of_Arthur_Mackmurdo,_incunabula ofArt Nouveau ]Arthur Heygate Mackmurdo (
December 12 1851 –March 15 1942 ) was a progressive English architect and designer, who influenced theArts and Crafts Movement , notably through theCentury Guild of Artists , which he set up in partnership withSelwyn Image in 1882.Mackmurdo started his apprenticeship with
Gothic Revival architectJames Brooks in 1869. In 1873, he visitedJohn Ruskin 's School of Drawing, and accompagnied Ruskin to Italy in 1874. That same year, Mackmurdo opened his own architectural practice at 28, Southampton Street, inLondon .The Century Guild of Artists was one of the more successful craft guilds set up in the 1880s. It offered complete furnishing of homes and buildings, and its artists were encouraged to participate in production as well as design; Mackmurdo himself mastered several crafts, including
metalworking andcabinet making .Mackmurdo's architecturally significant houses include 8 Private Road, Enfield, London (1887), and 25 Cadogan Gardens, London (1893-1894).The latter is a lusty, bay-windowed, white-trimmed, red-brick studio house for the painter,
Mortimer Menpes .References
* [http://www.victorianweb.org/art/design/mackmurdo/ahmov.html Victorian Web:] A.H. Mackmurdo, an Overview ("Arthur Heygote Mackmurdo" throughout)
* [http://www.twbookmark.com/books/64/0821228412/chapter_excerpt18518.html Pamela Todd, "The Arts and Crafts Companion":] Introduction: Philosophy & Background
* L.Lambourne. 1980. "Utopian Craftsmen: The Arts and Crafts Movement from the Cotswold to Chicago"
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