Rug
Maker | Maja Andersson Wirde (Swedish designer, 1873-1952); Studio Loja Saarinen (American workshop, 1928-1942) |
Title | Rug |
Date of Creation | 1931 |
Location | Bloomfield Hills, Michigan |
Materials | Wool, linen |
Institution | Cranbrook Educational Community |
Credit Line | Collection Cranbrook Art Museum, Stewarded by Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research |
Accession Number | CAM 1982.53 |
Photo Credit | © Cranbrook Art Museum and Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research | James Haefner |
Category | Textiles |
This spectacular Art Deco hand-knotted ryijy rug (carpet hanging) outfitted the boardroom of the Cranbrook Foundation at the center of an ambitious educational experiment north of Detroit. A collaboration among many immigrant women textile artists, its striking colors, dynamic rhythms, and balance of jazzy, asymmetrical borders with tone-on-tone fields represents the best of Cranbrook’s enterprising weaving workshop, Studio Loja Saarinen. Established in 1928 and rooted in the English Arts and Crafts movement, the Cranbrook Arts and Crafts Studios produced handmade objects—furniture, silver, ironwork, prints, book bindings, and textiles—for a growing campus. Founded by philanthropists and newspaper publishers Ellen Scripps Booth and George Gough Booth, between 1922 and 1942, Cranbrook developed into an intentional community of schools, museums, and a graduate art academy. Studio Loja Saarinen, led by its namesake Finnish-American sculptor and textile artist, was responsible for handweaving dozens of rugs, hundreds of curtains, bolts of upholstery fabric, and more for Cranbrook and for retail sale. Loja Saarinen managed the Studio as a modern artist-entrepreneur, providing her own designs and color samples, coordinating designs by others, innovating the Studio’s looms, and procuring materials. She also staged international exhibitions to promote her workshop and teaching departments. Swedish designer Maja Andersson Wirde immigrated to Michigan to be Shop Supervisor for Saarinen. Andersson Wirde brought a modern design sensibility and enormous technical expertise, attracting more than a dozen young Swedish women to the Studio. Many lived on Cranbrook’s campus, a cohesive total work of art designed by Loja and her husband, the architect and educator Eliel Saarinen. Loja Saarinen’s legacy continues today in the Fiber Department at Cranbrook Academy of Art and Weaving Room at Cranbrook Kingswood Upper School, both part of Cranbrook Educational Community. Learn more about the Studio’s textiles online or in person through Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research, or seasonal tours of the restored Saarinen House.