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Art Institute of Chicago

Spotted

William Morris — Brer Rabbit (or Brother Rabbit)
William Morris

Brer Rabbit (or Brother Rabbit)

1881

Morris & Co. produced this two-color design using a simple, age-old technique: the white pattern of rabbits and birds nestled among acorns and oak leaves was block printed with a substance that would resist the dye. When the fabric was immersed in a dye bath (seen here in red), the background—all of the unprinted fabric—absorbed the color to reveal the pattern in white. Block printing using either a color or a substance that resists color (or a combination of the two techniques) was the standard method for all of Morris & Co.’s cotton fabrics.

Medium
Madder vat dyed and block printed cotton
Dimensions

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About this work

William Morris, Brer Rabbit (or Brother Rabbit), 1881

Morris & Co. produced this two-color design using a simple, age-old technique: the white pattern of rabbits and birds nestled among acorns and oak leaves was block printed with a substance that would resist the dye. When the fabric was immersed in a dye bath (seen here in red), the background—all of the unprinted fabric—absorbed the color to reveal the pattern in white. Block printing using either a color or a substance that resists color (or a combination of the two techniques) was the standard method for all of Morris & Co.’s cotton fabrics.

Medium
Madder vat dyed and block printed cotton
Dimensions
141 x 193 cm
Year
1881
Seen at
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Related themes

Modern, Large Scale

More works by William Morris

Collected by

Art Institute of Chicago, Cleveland Museum of Art