The Tile Club: Camaraderie and American Plein-Air Painting The Tile Club | Page 15

“ decorative mania...had fallen like a destructive angel upon the most flourishing cities in America, turning orderly homes into bristling and impenetrable curiosity-shops.  reflect the prevailing mode of taste in America, which artists to set an example in the decorative arts to Centennial Exposition. It was a time, one of them later recalled, when how much of this repartee is genuine and how much is tongue-in-cheek. In any event, one enthusiastic artist was for decorative objects and paintings, preferably based on European standards, as prompted by the “decorative mania...had fallen like a destructive angel upon the most flourishing cities in America, turning orderly homes into bristling and impenetrable curiosity- shops.” 6 The overwhelming popularity of decorative objects actually had an adverse affect on the sale of paintings (or at least those that did not conform to the aesthetics of this movement). Responding to this situation one of the artists suggested their new club be based on some sort of decorative notion so that they would not be “behind the times.” 7 Another scoffed at the idea, declaring that he would not lower his stan- dards; he then assured the others, “It is only a tempo- rary craze, a phase of popular insanity that will wear itself out as soon as a new hobby is presented to take its place.” 8 Someone else countered that the current interest in decorative pursuits was “encouraging evidence of the growing influence of our methods of art education.” 9 And yet another maintained it was indeed an obligation on their part as professional prevent the “uncultivated” from proceeding “blindly to ridiculous extremes.” 10 It is difficult to ascertain just proclaimed, “Let us be decorative!” 11 And, evidently, there was no further opposition. Just what form of decorative art should they pursue? Suggestions included fresco, wallpaper, and fabric design, most certainly options inspired by the popularity of the English designers William Morris and Charles Locke Eastlake, or even the painter Lawrence Alma-Tadema. Their celebrity was underscored by Great Britain’s strong presence at the Centennial Exposition, described by Abbey to be “by far the most interesting” in the show. 12 London-born Walter Paris agreed, as did the English architect Edward Wimbridge, who finally came up with the “winning” idea: tiles. “Tiles are what we need,” Wimbridge declared. “The element of color and variety is lost in the decorative details of our structures.” 13 A skeptic in the ranks queried, “…and when you’ve done them, what’ll you do with them?” 14 “Why, just what you do with the pictures you paint,” answered another, “[you] keep them”—no Decorative Age or Decorative Craze? 9