Home >> Arts >> Crafts >> Needlework >> Guilds




A Arts Club was founded by Charles Dickens amongst others within 1863 in London as a forum primarily for creative person & writers.

It was the hub of the arts in the period of the Nineteenth Century &, although the social venue, it was known to exist as a place in which influence can be exerted & careers developed. It wwhen seen as a power home behind a dealings of the Royal Academy. Its members & guests involved Dickens, Millais, Whistler, Kipling, Monet, Rodin, Degas, Turgenev & Kipling. Yet, when a arts developed into Modernism it failed to keep pace, & its continuing allegiance to the Academy gave it the distinctly old-passee air.

When early when 1891 one of its leading members James McNeill Whistler broke away to found a rival Chelsea Arts Club. Additional recently venues like a Colony Club and Groucho Club have provided a role which a Arts Club utilized to.

Its original assumption were at Seventeen Hanover Square, Mayfair. When 30 years there, it moved nearby to its todays accommodation, an Eighteenth Century row house at 40 Dover Street. It was badly bombed in the Blitz and extensively rebuilt. Various scandals undermined a Club while you took a endure century, including a disappearance of a club silver when you took refurbishments (the crates when opened were filled using bricks) also when fifty art works from either its collection.

It offers super salubrious facilities, by having the distinct drawing room, bar, dining-room, bistro & outside garden. There are regular activities & talks from either easily-known personalities. Membership is ordinarily available in application to the Club Secretary. There is a dress code of "smart casual". Cases & ties come far flung but not obligatory. Membership requirements come the participation or even even interest around art, literature or science.

Todays membership includes a total of large Royal Academicians, designer & writers (the Authors Club is now housed at A Arts Club). A Stuckists artists have held meetings & an exhibition at a Club. Sir Peter Blake is a member, as come creative person like Graham Ovenden from the Brotherhood of Ruralists.

Creative Stitchers, Flint MI EGA Chapter
Meets on the first Wednesdays of September thru June at the Grand Blanc Heritage Association Museum

Embroiderers Guild
Sharing opportunities for discovery and creativity, bringing people and embroidery together.

Embroiderers Guild of America - Philadelphia Chapter
Non profit organization to promote the study and practice of needlework. Monthly meetings take place in Wayne, PA. Chapter events, membership information, newsletter.

Royal School of Needlework
Passing on the art of ornamental needlework using traditional hand embroidery techniques. Three year apprenticeship, one year certificate program, variety of classes. Annual exhibition. Active workroom undertakes commissions, both new and restorative.

The Smocking Arts Guild of America
An organization promoting smocking, fine hand sewing and related needle arts. Provides ideas, patterns, education, communication, and quality workmanship.

American Needlepoint Guild
Non-profit organization for needlepoint (including most handwork on evenweave). Events, national and chapter information, "Needle Pointers" magazine, correspondence courses, certification for teaching and judging.

San Diego ANG 2000 Stitch-In
Chapter of the American Needlepoint Guild, California. Non-profit organization dedicated to needlearts

National Academy of Needlearts
Devoted to the advancement of embroidery as an art form. Features publications, membership and certification information.

Indian River Chapter, EGA
Embroiderers' Guild of America. Non profit organization to promote the study and practice of needlework.

Needlework Guild of Michigan
Non profit organization to promote the study and practice of needlework. Chapter events, membership information.






© 2005 GeneralAnswers.org