Stunning. This piece is unused and was an unwanted piece when curtains were made. Could be hung as a long strip or incorporated into cushions. Fresh and crisp. I also have longer lengths.
Althea Marjorie McNish (1924-2020) was the first Afro Caribbean woman to gain international prominence in the British textile world, both for her furnishing and dress designs. Althea said she saw life "through a tropical eye" and most of her designs are based on nature, though some use abstract and occasionally geometric themes.
Born in the Port of Spain, Trinidad and descended from the Merikin settlers (Afro American slaves) who had fought for the British in 1818*. Her father was a writer, teacher and publisher, Joseph Claude McNish and her mother Margaret, a dressmaker. By the age of 16 Althea exhibited at the Trinidad Art society and later worked an an entomological illustrator for the British colonial government. "I had to go into the field and do detailed drawings of insects to help in the sugar and cocoa pest control programme". When she was 18 her father had already moved to London, which probably prompted her to apply for, and win a scholarship to study architecture at the Architectural Association. Moving with her mother to London, she had a change of heart and, instead of reading architecture chose to join a print studies course at the London School of Printing and Graphic Arts, now the London College of Communication. She moved to the Central School of Art & Design, now Central St Martin's, where her tutor was sculptor Eduardo Paolozzi. He encouraged her to concentrate on designing and screen printing textiles. Postgraduate studies at the Royal College of Art and a career as a freelance designer followed.
The day after her graduation in 1958, Althea approached Liberty's with her portfolio, who immediately commisioned a range of furnishing fabircs, with a strong tropical feel. "As far as possible, the richness and the vibrancy of colour must remain". She went on to supply Heals, eight designs for Hull Traders and in 1960 further designs for Cavendish Textiles. She produced dress abrics for Zika Ascher, who supplied French fashion houses, and was regularly featured in glossy fashion magazines. Cardin, Dior, Schiaparelli, Givenchy and Lanvin became Althea's clients. She designed laminate murals for the restaurants on ocean liner SS Oriana (1959), and a 'Bachelor Girl's Room' for the Ideal Home exhibition in London (1966). She was also commissioned to produce velvet hangings for British Rail's London office at Euston station (1969) and a banner for London's Design Centre (1981).
Althea retained an artistic connection to the West Indies and was a founding member of the Caribbean Artists Movement (1966-72). She designed laminate murals for the interior of the Port of Spain General Hospital as well as fabric for Queen Elizabeth's official wardrobe, during her 1966 visit to Trinidad and Tobago.
Her work was displayed in exhibitions at the Whitworth, Manchester, and in London at the Victoria & Albert Museum, the Commononwealth Institute (1961), the Hockney Gallery (1997) Somerset House (2019) and the MODA -The Mueum of Domestic Architecture. In America at the Cooper Hewitt and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Transforming the Crown: African, Asian & Caribbean Artists in Britain 1966-1996 was held at the Caribbean Cultural Center. Exhibitions also at The Studio Museum in Harlem, and the Bronx Museum of the Arts, both New York. In 2003 she exhibited Althea McNish: My World of Colour: the international work and inspirations of a Black British Trinidadian textile designer. Ohio University, Athens, USA. There were also group exhibitions in Australia, USA, UK and France.
Althea was vice-president and fellow of the Chartered Society of Designers, and a trustee of the UK Design Council. She was awarded the Chaconia gold medal in Trinidad and an honorary doctorate in fine art in 2006 from the University of Trinidad and Tobago, whose students she mentored.
Althea McNish was married to British jewellery designer and architect John Weiss.
Golden Harvest. The bright blue, dark and mid blue with deep aquamarine ground with tall black sketched wheat sheaves, some straight some bending, with touches of yellow and white splodges, hand screen printed on a cotton ground, Golden Harvest designed by Althea McNish. A Time Present Fabric. Shrunk Washable.
Each piece: 5ft 4 x 6 in; 1.64 x 15 cm
Unused.
Althea Mcnish's textiles can be seen at the Harris Museum, Preston, Lancashire; the Royal Scottish Museum, Edinburgh; MODA - Museum of Domestic Architecture and the V & A London.
*wikipedia.org/wiki/Merikin
Women Design by Libby Sellers
Revolutionary Fabrics and Furniture 1957-1980, Shirley Craven and Hull Traders, Lesley Jackson. Antique Collector's Club Ltd 2009.
Price: £75 | $90 | €90
All images and text © meg-andrews.com 2021