An Arts & Crafts embroidered patchwork bedcover designed by John Aldam Heaton (1830-1897) and worked by his sister Fanny Heaton (1828-1893), English, 2nd half 19th century, large patchwork coverlet, expertly embroidered in a variety of stitches, 213 x 167 cm (66 x 84 ins)
Footnote: Provenance: John Aldam Heaton and his sister Fanny Heaton; their great niece Evelyn Spence Addison (1891-1962); her daughter Jean Cecil Edwards née Addison (1923-2013); her son, the present owner. The owner donated a similar embroidered bedcover to the V&A, also designed by John Aldam Heaton and worked by his sister Fanny (accession number T.213-1989). John Aldam Heaton was an artist, designer and businessman, who started off as a wool and textile manufacturer in Bradford, before moving to the ancient farm of 'Woodbank' in Yorkshire in 1860.
Influenced by the Pre-Raphaelite movement, he designed furniture, stained glass, wallpaper and textiles, and counted Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William Burne-Jones, and William Morris amongst his friends. Indeed, in 1861 Heaton invited Rossetti to paint a
portrait of his wife, Ellen, and the artist stayed a month at 'Woodbank' in order to carry out the commission. The painting, Regina Cordium [Queen of Hearts] - Portrait of Mrs Ellen Heaton, subsequently formed the basis for a stained glass window for the house, a commission which was one of the first undertaken by Morris & Co. Heaton was a member of the Neo-Classical Arts and Crafts Movement, and published several books about art and design, including Furniture and Decoration in England during the
Eighteenth Century (1889-1892), Beauty and Art (1897), and a trade catalogue in 1895 showcasing 'Chimney-pieces, Ornamental Lattice, Wall-papers, Frieze Painting, Blinds, Carpets, Furniture, Designs for Needlework, Embroidery, Curtains, Church Work,
Stained Glass, Painting'. He set up workshops in Bloomsbury in order to undertake larger and more prestigious commissions, collaborating with many important artists as well as the architect Richard Norman Shaw. Working with Shaw, Heaton’s company
produced lavish interior designs and furnishings for the White Star Line ships. After Heaton's death the Aldam Heaton Company was incorporated into White Star and designed the interiors for the RMS Olympic, Titanic and Britannic. The V&A has several wallpaper designs by Heaton in its collection. Fanny Heaton married the eminent physician Dr John Deakin Heaton (no relation). She was a strong advocate for the education of women, and an early campaigner for women's suffrage.
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An Arts & Crafts embroidered patchwork bedcover designed by John Aldam Heaton (1830-1897) and worked by his sister Fanny Heaton (1828-1893), English, 2nd half 19th century, large patchwork coverlet, expertly embroidered in a variety of stitches, 213 x 167 cm (66 x 84 ins)
Footnote: Provenance: John Aldam Heaton and his sister Fanny Heaton; their great niece Evelyn Spence Addison (1891-1962); her …
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