The Grammar of Ornament

Amazon.com Price: $40.00 (as of 05/12/2019 20:22 PST- Details)

Description

The Grammar of Ornament is by any standards a remarkable book. When it used to be first published in 1856, it used to be the first time that such a lot of illustrations of ornament, of many periods and from many countries, had ever been shown in color in one work. It used to be the concept that of Owen Jones (1808–74), a young Welsh architect, who at the age of twenty-three went on his grand tour to visit Turkey, Egypt, Sicily, and Spain. In Granada he became fascinated by the Alhambra Palace, in which at that time visitors could if truth be told make a choice their own suites of room and take up residence. Jones made detailed drawings of the Palace, and in August 1834, he returned to England carrying not only his drawings, but also an enormous number of casts: “To verify perfect accuracy, an impression of every ornament all over the palace used to be taken, either in plaster or with unsized paper, the low relief of the ornaments of the Alhambra rendering them peculiarly susceptible of this process.”

Jones’ aim used to be not to produce general artistic views, but to provide scientific accuracy in making an exact and detailed record of ornaments and colored decorations consisting in large part of flat bright colors in geometric patterns. He could not find any printer in London able to meet his requirements; with the assistance of lithographic printers Day and Haghe he set up his own lithographic press and trained his own workmen at his own expense, having to sell a part of the Welsh estate left him by his father to pay the costs of printing. Jones’ first book, Plans, Details, and Sections of the Alhambra, used to be the first of many projects leading toward his magnum opus, The Grammar of Ornament.

Commentary by Ruari McLean.


Recent Products