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Journal of Design History 2006 19(2):121-136; doi:10.1093/jdh/epl002
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© The Author [2006]. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Design History Society. All rights reserved.

Crossing the Borderlines and Moving the Boundaries

‘High’ Arts and Crafts, Cross-culturalism, Folk Art and Gender

Marjan Groot

Leiden University, the Netherlands

This paper will focus on three galleries in the Netherlands that once specialized in decorative arts and crafts. The period of study is between the years 1898 and roughly 1930. In all three galleries women played an important role. The discussion includes how these galleries can be linked to the gendering of art forms, interaction between ‘high’ and ‘low’ decorative art, and the notion of cross-culturalism. The three galleries explored concentrated on different aspects of the European decorative arts' reform movement: ‘high’ Arts and Crafts made by trained artist-designers, non-Western crafts coming from areas in the Far East, and home-made domestic folk arts and crafts from Northern and Central Europe. In addition to considering the actual employment of women as designers and gallery managers—which in itself was an important development—the issue of gender is addressed in a broader context. The discussion extends to rationality and notions of Nature with regard to primitiveness, femininity and masculinity. I hope to show that constructions of gender ideologies can correlate with an actual historical situation. Although the galleries reflect the Dutch case at the time, they can be seen to exemplify a more general trend.

Key Words: women designers • decorative arts reforms • gender • separate spheres • cultural interaction • Netherlands


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