Ethel Mairet

Ethel Mairet
Born
Ethel Mary Partridge

17 February 1872
Barnstaple, Devon, England
Died18 November 1952(1952-11-18) (aged 80)
Other namesEthel Coomaraswamy
Known forHand loom weaving designer
Notable workA Book on Vegetable Dyes

Ethel Mary Partridge, Ethel Mary Mairet RDI, or Ethel Mary Coomaraswamy (17 February 1872 – 18 November 1952) was a British hand loom weaver, significant in the development of the craft during the first half of the twentieth century.[1]

Early life

Ethel Mary Partridge was born in Barnstaple, Devon, in 1872. Her parents were David (a pharmacist) and Mary Ann (born Hunt) Partridge. She was educated locally and in 1899 she qualified to teach the piano at the Royal Academy of Music.[2] She then took up work as a governess, first in London and later in Bonn, Germany.

Introduction to textiles

The Norman Chapel House main entrance in Broad Campden in 1895. This (partly 12th century) house was renovated by C. R. Ashbee for Ananda Coomaraswamy from 1905 to 1907[3]

She met the art historian and philosopher Ananda Coomaraswamy.[4] The couple married on 19 June 1902 and travelled to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), where he conducted a mineral survey. The couple recorded the arts and crafts of each village, and Mairet kept detailed journals, photographing each craft she observed.[5] They returned to England in 1907 and published their investigations into Ceylon crafts.[4]

Until 1910 they lived in Broad Campden[4] where the arts and crafts architect Charles Robert Ashbee had established a community of artists and craftspeople. This Guild and School of Handicraft in Chipping Campden included Ethel's brother Frederick James Partridge,[6] a jeweller. Ashbee renovated a Norman chapel as the Coomaraswamy home. The couple visited India, where they added to the textile collection they had begun whilst in Ceylon.[4]

Weaving and dyeing

Aside from some rudimentary lessons in Ceylon and the British Isles, Ethel Mairet was self-taught as a weaver, spinner and dyer. Although she was well-known for weaving, she acknowledged that she was not a talented weaver.[5]

Mairet made her first experiments with weaving and dyeing in 1909 in Chipping Camden. She studied vegetable dyes in the Bodleian Library, Oxford and is said[according to whom?] to have travelled to the Lake District to learn weaving during this period. Her knowledge of dyes and mordants were likely compounded by her father (a chemist) and her husband Ananda Coomaraswamy (a botanist).[citation needed]

Over the winter of 1910 Mairet and Coomaraswamy travelled to India. She wrote to the Ashbees over this period, and kept a journal detailing her discoveries of rare textiles and decorative jewellery, noting the vegetable dyes used.[5]

In 1910 Coomaraswamy began having an affair and their marriage ended.[7] Ethel then built a house near Barnstaple complete with studios for textile dyeing and weaving.[2] In 1913 she married Philip Mairet and together they established the Thatched House, a joint home and studio near Stratford upon Avon. The studio provided a base for her first weaving workshop. The following year she was visited by Mahatma Gandhi, who knew of her work in Ceylon and was interested in using simple textile techniques in India (see Khadi).[2]

In 1916 she published A Book on Vegetable Dyes[5] printed by Hilary Pepler at the Hampshire House Press in Hammersmith, London.

Ditchling

Ditchling Museum of Art + Craft

In 1916 she visited Hilary Pepler in Ditchling, and decided to move there herself.[4] In 1917 she completed An Essay on Crafts and Obedience and oversaw the production of the second edition of A Book on Vegetable Dyes, both published by Pepler at St Dominic's Press in Ditchling.

Gospels, Mairet's third and final building project, was completed in late 1920. During the 1930s and 1940s she trained people in weaving and dyeing at her Ditchling studio. Mairet's training is said to have influenced all the handweavers of that generation, including Hilary Bourne, Valentine KilBride, Elizabeth Peacock, Petra Gill and Peter Collingwood.[8][5]

The Swiss weaver Marianne Straub came to work with her and to learn more about hand loom weaving;[9] Mairet taught Straub about hand dyeing and spinning as well. Straub introduced a variety of double cloth weaves and developed a friendship with Mairet.[10] Mairet learnt in turn from Straub and this underwrote her belief that hand loom weaving could be used by industry. Straub and Mairet went on three European holidays during the mid 1930s. Straub frequently returned to Mairet and Gospels.[10] A surviving journal written by Mairet from a European journey with her husband in 1927 illustrates how her observations were dominated not by whom she met but what they were wearing.[11]

In 1921 Bernard Leach and Shoji Hamada visited Mairet at Gospels.[5]

Mairet was a member of both the Red Rose Guild of Craftsmen and the Guild of Weavers, Spinners and Dyers, and in 1937 she became the first woman awarded the Royal Society of Arts title of Royal Designer for Industry.[12] In 1939 she published Handweaving Today, Traditions and Change. She taught at the Brighton College of Art from 1939 until 1947.

Legacy

Mairet died in Ditchling Common in 1952 and was buried in Brighton, at St Nicholas' churchyard.[2]

Mairet influenced a generation of weavers. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography quotes the Japanese potter Shoji Hamada who called Mairet "the mother of English hand-weaving".[4] Ditchling Museum of Art + Craft exhibits artifacts related to Mairet and other artists who worked locally.[13]

She is the subject of a biography, A Weaver's Life: Ethel Mairet.[5]

The Ethel Mairet archive is held at the Crafts Study Centre. It includes documents and memorabilia from 1872–1952. Personal documents, travel journals 1910–1938. business and personal letters, books of account and photographs are included[14] and are still a subject of academic study.[11]

Published works

  • Mairet, Ethel M. (1916). A Book on Vegetable Dyes. Douglas Pepler at the Hampshire House Workshops, Hammersmith, gutenberg.org.
  • Ethel Mairet (1939). Hand-weaving To-day, Traditions and Changes: By Ethel Mairet,... Faber and Faber.

References

  1. ^ Robertson, Kirsty (1 May 2015) [2005]. "Resistance and Submission, Warp and Weft: Unraveling the Life of Ethel Mairet". Textile: The Journal of Cloth and Culture. 3 (3): 292–317. doi:10.2752/147597505778052486. S2CID 154970477.
  2. ^ a b c d "Ethel Mairet". Brighton University. Archived from the original on 1 August 2015. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  3. ^ "Norman Chapel House". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 21 October 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Coatts, Margot (October 2007) [2004]. "Mairet, Ethel Mary (1872–1952)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/39639. Retrieved 18 October 2015. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Coatts, Margot (31 August 1983). A Weaver's Life: Ethel Mairet, 1872–1952. London Bath: Crafts Council in association with the Crafts Study Centre. ISBN 978-0903798709.
  6. ^ "C R Ashbee". Cheltenham Art Gallery and Museum. Archived from the original on 26 October 2015. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  7. ^ Crooks, Edward James (1985). John Cage's Entanglement with the Ideas of Coomaraswamy (PDF) (PhD thesis). University of York. pp. 66–67. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
  8. ^ "Craft Study Centre". University Museum of Modern Crafts. Archived from the original on 13 May 2015. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  9. ^ Faculty portraits. "Dr Marianne Straub". brighton.ac.uk. University of Brighton. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  10. ^ a b Schoeser, Mary (1997). "Marianne Straub". In Coatts, Margot (ed.). Pioneers of Modern Craft. Manchester: Manchester University Press. pp. 84–94. ISBN 978-0-7190-5058-9.
  11. ^ a b Mairet, Ethel (2015). "Yugoslavian Journal, May 4–30, 1927". The Journal of Modern Craft. 8 (1): 77–85. doi:10.2752/174967715X14213400209999. S2CID 191981408.
  12. ^ "Ethel Mairet". University of Brighton Faculty of Arts. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
  13. ^ "About Us". Ditchling Museum of Art and Craft. Archived from the original on 18 September 2015. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  14. ^ "The Ethel Mairet Crafts Study Centre. Reference Number(s) GB 2941 2003.21/2003.23". Archives Hub. Retrieved 20 October 2015.

External links

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