• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Nation Building and Design: Finnish Textiles and the Work of the Friends of Finnish Handicrafts
  • Contributor: Ashby, Charlotte
  • imprint: Oxford University Press, 2010
  • Published in: Journal of Design History
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 0952-4649; 1741-7279
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <p>This article explores the relationship between nation-building impulses and developments in Finnish textile design in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a period of rapid modernization and active nationalism. Textiles, as a case study, serve first to illustrate how design was drawn in to the nation-building process in the late nineteenth century through its relationship to the revaluation of Finland's vernacular culture. The story of Finnish textile design from the 1870s to the 1910s illustrates the shift from a constructed idea of a national style rooted in ethnographic and archaeological sources to an increasingly loose interpretation of 'Finnishness' and Finnish design success. The emphasis on vernacular models was swiftly overtaken in the twentieth century, without any diminution of the extent to which designers and design institutions were committed to the cause of advancing Finnish culture. The Friends of Finnish Handicrafts, founded initially to educate public taste and preserve national traditions, went on to provide a framework for the development of professional design and art textiles in Finland. Interest in a national style had not diminished the extent to which designers followed international trends. Indeed, the search for a national style was itself a popular international trend and one that relied on designers' ability to conceptualize their work within an international context.</p>