The Colour Craze of the 19th Century: Victorian Art, Fashion and Design

Overview

The Victorian age was one of the most colourful moments in British history, despite the prevailing image of the 19th century as a monochrome period of industrial pollution and mourning dresses. Join us in Oxford for this day school to uncover how the 19th century was a vibrant colour-filled era. This one-day event is run concurrently with the Ashmolean exhibition ‘Colour Revolution: Victorian Art, Fashion and Design’.

From dazzling dyes used in corsets and stockings and the flamboyant use of nature's beauty in fashion, to the shimmering splendour of ceramics and bold experiments by avant-garde painters, we will rediscover Victorian society as a vibrant colour-filled era. At the heart of the Victorian colour revolution was the art critic John Ruskin, who played a crucial role in shaping modern debates about colour. Rebelling against the bleakness of his industrial present, Ruskin praised the sacred hues of nature as well as the medieval polychromy of the past. Discussions about colour were not only confined to artistic circles. Scientists explored colour production and perception, and technological innovations such as vivid coal-tar dyes and chromolithography made bright hues available to all sections of society for the first time. 

The International Exhibition of 1862 in London reflected this new fascination for colour. This landmark event celebrated the colours of the past as much as the new hues of modernity. We will also explore the equally influential hues of the East including Egypt, India and Japan. Our journey through the Victorian colour revolution will also consider the use of colour in Aestheticism and take an interdisciplinary approach to consider colour in the work of Decadent authors such as Oscar Wilde, John Addington Symonds and Aubrey Beardsley.

Please note: this event will close to enrolments at 23:59 UTC on 8 November 2023.

Programme details

9.30am
Registration at Rewley House reception

9.45am
Unweaving the rainbow: colour in the nineteenth-century 
Maddie Hewitson

11.00am
Tea/coffee

11.30am
Colour into coal: the aniline dye revolution
Matthew Winterbottom

12.45pm
Lunch

1.45pm
Exploring Werner’s Nomenclature of Colours (1814)
Joyce Dixon

3.00pm
Tea/coffee

3.30pm
Journeys for colour: artist-travellers and British orientalism
Maddie Hewitson

4.45pm
End of day

Fees

Description Costs
Course Fee (includes tea/coffee) £99.00
Baguette lunch £6.50
Hot lunch (3 courses) £17.60

Funding

If you are in receipt of a UK state benefit or are a full-time student in the UK you may be eligible for a reduction of 50% of tuition fees.

Concessionary fees for short courses

Tutors

Dr Maddie Hewitson

Speaker

Madeline Hewitson is a Research Assistant at the Ashmolean Museum and holds a doctorate in art history from the University of York. Her research focuses on nineteenth-century British Orientalist visual culture and representations of the Holy Lands. Her current research project, supported by a Paul Mellon Centre Research Continuity Grant, investigates the unique role of the Old Testament in Victorian visual culture.

Matthew Winterbottom

Speaker

Matthew Winterbottom has more than 25 years’ experience working with and researching European decorative arts of the 16th–21st centuries. He has previously held posts at the Victoria & Albert Museum, the Royal Collection and the Holburne Museum in Bath. He joined the Ashmolean Museum's Department of Western Art in March 2014 as Curator of Nineteenth-Century Decorative Arts. He recently worked on the redisplay for the Nineteenth-Century Art Galleries that incorporate decorative arts for the first time and on the new Michael Wellby Gallery of Continental Goldsmiths’ work.

Miss Joyce Dixon

Speaker

Joyce Dixon is a PhD student at Edinburgh College of Art, researching the Edinburgh history of Patrick Syme’s 1814 work Werner’s Nomenclature of Colours. Her research in funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council's Doctoral Training Partnership. Joyce has a Master’s degree from the Royal College of Art, and has presented her research at the University of Cambridge, the Royal College of Art and the National Gallery of Scotland, among other venues.

Application

Please use the 'Book' button on this page. Alternatively, please contact us to obtain an application form.

Accommodation

Accommodation is not included in the price, but if you wish to stay with us the night before the course, then please contact our Residential Centre.

Accommodation in Rewley House - all bedrooms are modern, comfortably furnished and each room has tea and coffee making facilities, Freeview television, and Free WiFi and private bath or shower rooms.  Please contact our Residential Centre on +44 (0) 1865 270362 or email res-ctr@conted.ox.ac.uk for details of availability and discounted prices.