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  1. May (Mary) Morris (1862-1938) was the daughter of the designer William Morris (1834-1896). When she was a child her mother, Jane Morris, and her aunt Bessie Burden taught her to make large scale embroideries in crewel work (wool). They were based on Morris’s medieval models. She was also encouraged to design for herself.

  2. May Morris 1862 – 1938. Designer, embroiderer, polymath. 25 March 1862 – 16 October 1938. A tribute by Claire Allen-Johnstone. Following decades of neglect, May Morris is finally becoming well known as a talented Arts and Crafts embroidery designer and maker with an individual flowing style and an extraordinary way with colour.

  3. メイ・モリス May Morris (1862-1938) 偉大なるウィリアム・モリスの次女、メイ。 多彩な父の元で育った彼女自身もまた、類まれなる才能に恵まれていました。幼い頃より母ジェーンと叔母エリザベス・バーデンより刺繍の手ほどきを受けたことから、刺繍作家としての天性が開花。美術学校で刺繍 ...

  4. Questions surround who originally designed ‘Honeysuckle’, with some arguing that May’s father, William Morris was in fact the chief designer of the wallpaper. This is based on its earliest known attribution from 1890 by the writer of an article in 'The Woman’s World', where it was credited to William Morris.

  5. May Morris, John Quinn Susquehanna University Press , 1997 - Art - 228 pages In her introduction, which places the correspondence in its literary and historical context, author Janis Londraville explains that the Morris-Quinn affair was doomed from the start.

  6. 14 de mar. de 2023 · The first fully illustrated and comprehensive introduction to May Morris’s work as an artist, designer, and embroiderer, published in association with the V&A and the William Morris Gallery, London. Now available in paperback. May Morris (1862–1938) was a significant figure in the British Arts and Crafts movement and a pioneer of art embroidery. She ran the embroidery department of Morris ...

  7. 8 de jul. de 2019 · May Morris, Arts & Crafts Designer; May Morris: Art and Life, New Perspectives. Charlotte Gere (Independent decorative arts specialist) Pages 115-117