Summer Seminars Week #2: The Art and Crafts of the Machine

Join us for our Summer Seminars 2026, “Craft, Design, and the Machine in Modern Life,” a six-part online lecture series!

Led by SMCF Executive Director Jonathan Clancy, Ph.D., this series explores a series of conversations spanning the Arts and Crafts movement to contemporary debates about technology and AI, where we invite you to explore what design means, what it can accomplish, and how the relationship between machines and culture continues to shape our lives. Together, these seminars use moments from history not as a comprehensive narrative, but as opportunities to learn, reflect, and engage in the important discussions that the Stickley Museum at Craftsman Farms seeks to foster.

Lectures may be purchased individually or as a complete series. Click here for the full course description.

 

Week #2: June 27, at 1:00 PM EDT via Zoom
The Art and Crafts of the Machine

“The machine is intellect mastering the drudgery of earth that the plastic art may live; that the margin of leisure and strength by which man’s life upon the earth can be made beautiful, may immeasurably widen; its function ultimately to emancipate human expression!” – Frank Lloyd Wright

“To criticize the movement as being out of touch with modern thought is to misinterpret its best ideals. It seeks to bring a better standard to industrial work, establish a permanent demand for better things, and furnish an adequate livelihood for those who are competent to give beauty to hand work. It does not necessarily antagonize machinery, nor does it hope to achieve its ends through a reversion to primitive methods.” – Ernest Batchelder

The deeper you dig into the Arts and Crafts movement, the more you will find that there is no single, satisfactory answer to the central question Triggs asked: What is the relation of the machine to culture? What we find instead is evidence of struggle, of complexity, of contradiction. It would be easy–and some have tried–to dismiss the movement and its makers as insincere if not altogether hypocritical simply because there are moments of misalignment between word and deed. Does every potter need to work in the manner of a George Ohr or a William Walley in order that we might find them consistent? Or, following the lead of Walt Whitman––”Do I contradict myself? / Very well then I contradict myself, / (I am large, I contain multitudes)––can we understand these contradictions as features rather than failures? In this session we’ll explore how aesthetics can reinforce and/or undermine the movement’s philosophical claims and think through the production of objects. We’ll explore why these claims–even as they were difficult to substantiate–had such a powerful draw for producers and consumers.

 

A La Carte
Member Price: $30 / session
Non-Member Price: $35 / session

Full Course
Member Price: All 6 sessions for $150 (one session free)
Non-Member Price: All 6 sessions for $210

Date

Jun 27 2026

Time

1:00 pm - 2:30 pm

Cost

$35.00

More Info

Register

Location

via Zoom

Category

Organizer

The Stickley Museum at Craftsman Farms
The Stickley Museum at Craftsman Farms
Phone
9735400311
Email
info@stickleymuseum.org
Website
https://www.stickleymuseum.org/
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