- Source: Contemporary Applied Arts
- Tanglewood Symposium
- Britania Raya
- Manusia
- Maiolica
- Nonlogam
- Emas
- Cakupan Google Street View
- John Wesley
- Daftar pengatur bahasa
- Tracy Chapman
- Contemporary Applied Arts
- Applied arts
- Museum of Contemporary Design and Applied Arts
- Mary Farmer
- Visual arts
- Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna
- The arts
- Carol McNicoll
- Crafts Centre of Great Britain
- Visual arts education
Contemporary Applied Arts (CAA) is a British art gallery and professional membership organisation in London, England. Established in 1948 as the members' selling orgnisation Crafts Centre of Great Britain (CCGB), it was known as the British Crafts Centre from 1972 to 1986.
History
Five societies cooperated in this enterprise:
The Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society
The Red Rose Guild
The Society of Scribes and Illuminators
The Senefelder Club (lithography)
The Society of Wood Engravers
The late HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh accepted Presidency in 1953 and provided active support, advice and custom until his death in 2021. He purchased two rugs from Mary Farmer in 1965/6 for his personal collection.
In 1964, the CCGB adopted the Preliminary Proposals for the establishment of a Crafts Council of Great Britain (CCoGB). Cyril Wood was appointed Director of both CCGB and CCoGB, later that year deciding that the CCGB should be closed down. A temporary reprieve at Hay Hill, then saw the CCBG move to Covent Garden in 1966 under the stewardship of the Chairman Graham Hughes.
In 1972 the Crafts Centre and Crafts Council of Great Britain merge forming the British Crafts Centre. The CCGB is not the same organisation as the Crafts Council which was a later renaming of the Crafts Advisory Committee in 1979. Tania Harrod reflected on the first 50 years in 1998 At the time of their 75th Anniversary the Crafts Council reflected that the "selected members are professionals rigorously chosen by a panel of their peers. Belonging to CAA is seen as a kitemark of excellence."
As of 2015, the gallery director was Clare Maddison.
Locations
16/17 Hay Hill, London, W1J 8QP (Mayfair, off Piccadilly), which opened as a showroom in April 1950, and trading from 1953.
43 Earlham Street, London WC2H 9LD (Covent Garden), from 1966.
2 Percy Street, London W1P 9FA, from 1996.
89 Southwark Street, Bankside, London, SE1 0HX, from 2013.
6 Paddington Street, London, W1U 5QG, since 2019.
References
External links
Contemporary Applied Arts Official Website