The William Morris Society
The basement and Coach House of Kelmscott House, William Morris' last home.
Similar studio museums...
- 7 Hammersmith Terrace, United Kingdom - home of William Morris' close friend and colleague, Emery Walker (1851-1933)
- Red House, United Kingdom - the house William Morris commissioned, designed and decorated after his marriage in 1859
Feature List
- Guided Tours
- Workshops
- Temporary exhibitions
The William Morris Society aims to perpetuate the memory of one of the greatest men of the Victorian, or any, age. The life, work and ideas of William Morris (1834-1896) are as important today as they were in his lifetime. The Society exists to make them as widely known as possible.
The Society's office and museum are in the basement and Coach House of Kelmscott House, Hammersmith, Morris's London home for the last eighteen years of his life. During this time he ran his manufacturing company, Morris and Company, at Merton Abbey, he founded the Kelmscott Press and he held Socialist League (later the Hammersmith Socialist Society) meetings in the Coach House. Today the Society's talks and other events are held in the Coach House; it also hosts exhibitions of works by Morris and his wider circle.
The variety of Morris's ideas and activities bring together those who are interested in him as a designer, craftsman, poet, and socialist, who admire his robust and generous personality, his creative energy and his courage. His ideas on how we live and how we might live, on creative work, leisure and machinery, on ecology and conservation, on politics and the place of arts in our lives remain as stimulating now as they were over a century ago.