The Adam interior
Robert Adam was one of the most celebrated architects of his day. In 1768, he was commissioned to refurbish part of Saltram House in Devon, and he created a suite of rooms in the Neo-classical style to update the house.
As one of the most influential of the architects at the time, it was he who introduced the Neo-Classical style to Britain in the late 1750's. He combined a brilliant talent as an architectural decorator with active self-promotion.
Adam was particularly skilled in the design of ornament and in the use of colour. He worked with a limited range of small classical motifs taken from ancient Roma and Renaissance sources. He used them to decorate walls and ceilings and adapted them for furniture, carpets and silver.
From 1773 he published his designs and those of his brother James in four volumes. Other designers and manufacturers took up the style in competition with Adam, maintaining it as the leading British design for more than two decades.
A gift in your will
You may not have thought of including a gift to a museum in your will, but the V&A is a charity and legacies form an important source of funding for our work. It is not just the great collectors and the wealthy who leave legacies to the V&A. Legacies of all sizes, large and small, make a real difference to what we can do and your support can help ensure that future generations enjoy the V&A as much as you have.
MoreShop online
Time To Build by Adam Hayes (Print)||EVAEX

Time To Build by Adam Hayes.Screen print.Limited edition of 200, signed and numberedAdam Hayes is an illustrator currently working from a quiet corner…
Buy nowEvent - William Morris Textiles and Wallpapers
Sat 15 June 2013 14:00

STUDY DAY: Artist, writer, socialist and conservationist, William Morris is best-known today as a designer of flat patterns.
Book online

















