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Art &
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Cathedral
Mosaics
Part III - The Arts and Crafts Men
The decoration of the Cathedral in the period 1912-16
was largely the work of members of the Arts and Crafts Movement, notably
Robert Anning Bell and Robert Weir Schultz. Eric Gill was also associated
with the Movement, though he had distanced himself by the time he produced
the Stations of the Cross. Their work is among the best in the Cathedral.
The Arts and Crafts Movement, originating in mid-19th century Britain
with the ideas of John Ruskin, believed that industrialisation and mechanisation
dehumanised those involved and debased craftsmanship. The Movement advocated
individualism and creativity in art and design and a return to traditional
materials and working methods. Robert Anning Bell RA was experienced in
art and architecture and a designer of stained glass, mosaics, fabrics
and wallpaper. In 1900-01 he had produced a 32ft by 10ft mosaic for the
façade of the Horniman Museum in London. He was Professor of Decorative
Art at the Glasgow School of Art when John Marshall, the Westminster Cathedral
architect and a fellow Nonconformist, approached him.
The walls of the Lady Chapel in the Cathedral had been clad with marble
in 1908, but although a carved white marble frame had been put up above
the altar, it was empty of any altarpiece and the conches above the four
marble-clad wall niches were also undecorated. At Marshall's request,
Anning Bell produced a mosaic design for the altarpiece portraying Our
Lady standing and holding the Holy Child. For the conches he portrayed
Isaiah, Jeremiah, Daniel and Ezechiel, all Old Testament prophets who
had foreseen the Incarnation. The predominantly blue mosaics were installed
in 1912-13, under the supervision of Anning Bell and Marshall. The traditional,
direct method was employed by the experienced mosaicist, Gertrude Martin,
who had worked for George Bridge on the mosaics of the Holy Souls Chapel
ten years earlier.
The mosaics were generally praised and, although Cardinal Bourne himself
was disappointed, he agreed that Anning Bell should design the mosaic
over the main entrance. Bentley had provided a small sketch in pencil
for this in 1895-96 and Marshall had worked this up in colour in 1907.
These sketches were very largely followed by Anning Bell but the open
book with the words (in Latin) "I am the gate, if anyone enters by
Me he shall be saved" is a new theme, and the mosaic is considerably
simpler and more austere, with more subdued colours, than in the earlier
designs. It is clear that Anning Bell devoted considerable thought to
it, rejecting gold as liable to frost damage and bright colours as too
great a contrast with the background. The mosaic, grouted up to a level
surface, was installed in 1915-16 by James Powell & Sons of Whitefriars,
who also replaced the mosaics in the Sacred Heart Shrine at this time.
Meanwhile other members of the Arts and Crafts Movement were at work in
St Andrew's Chapel. Robert Weir Schultz (Schultz Weir from 1915) was architect
to the 4th Marquess of Bute, who had sent him to study Byzantine architecture
in Greece. The Marquess had offered to pay for the decoration of St Andrew's
Chapel providing that Schultz designed and supervised this. The mosaics
on the far wall portray cities connected with St Andrew's life - a fisherman
born in Bethsaida, later Bishop of Constantinople, finally crucified in
Patras in Greece. The near wall follows the journey of his relics, after
being seized in Constantinople in 1204 by the 4th Crusaders, to Milan,
Amalfi and, of course, St Andrews in Scotland. The floor is a stormy sea
inset with twenty-nine marine creatures while the altar consists of three
Scottish granites.
Besides Schultz himself, other Arts and Crafts colleagues who worked on
the Chapel were: George Jack (the mosaic cartoons), Thomas Stirling Lee
(sculpture), Ernest Gimson (inlaid ebony stalls) and Sidney Barnsley (kneelers).
Schultz's designs were approved in 1910 and the mosaics installed in 1914-15
by six of Ernest Debenham's group of mosaicists directed by Gaetano Meo,
using tesserae from both Venice and Powell & Sons (red and gold).
These were inserted by the traditional, direct, method into cement of
the same composition as used by Sir William Richmond in St Paul's Cathedral.
The mosaics are outstanding examples of quality and craftsmanship, particularly
the shimmering fish-scales (or 'golden clouds screening Paradise from
earthly view') on the vault, and the arches where thirty-three birds perch
amidst the foliage.
Patrick Rogers
First
published in Oremus the magazine of Westminster Cathedral October2004.
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Read more about Cathedral Mosaics -
Part I - Trial and Error
Part
II - Opus Sectile and the Italian Method
Part IV
- The Impossible Dream
Part
V - A Russian Perspective
Part
VI - The Journey proceeds
Part
VII - The Mystery Mosaics

The Lady Chapel altarpiece

The
west wall mosaic in St Andrew's Chapel in 1915.
(Corner animals later removed).
The
mosaic of Daniel in the Lady Chapel.

The entrance tympanum with mosaic designed by Robert
Anning Bell
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