This short article reports on the activities undertaken due to funding received from the Textile Society Special Award - Audrey Archivist's Award, 2015. The project supported by the funding aimed to catalogue, digitise and provide access to items from the Fraser Taylor and The Cloth Collection, alongside investigation to develop options for research projects and funding. The Fraser Taylor and The Cloth Collection is held by The Glasgow School of Art Archives and Collections, and comprises approximately 50 textile items and 20 files of paperwork including printed fabric lengths, textile samples, garments, sketchbooks, drawings, paper designs, photographs, press items, promotional material, publications and magazines
This is an editorial for a special issue of the Journal of Textile Design Research and Practice surr...
In 1983, Royal College of Art (RCA) students Brian Bolger, David Band, Helen Manning and Fraser Tayl...
Textile design and manufacture is intrinsic to the economic, social and cultural history of Scotland...
This short article reports on the activities undertaken due to funding received from the Textile Soc...
Textiles have been part of the activities at The Glasgow School of Art (GSA) since its formation in ...
In May 2014, Fraser Taylor donated a collection of items to GSA’s Archives and Collections. This col...
This event included a showcase of artefacts from the Glasgow School of Art’s Archives & Collections,...
This event included a showcase of artefacts from the Glasgow School of Art’s Archives & Collections,...
This paper centres on a collection donated to the Archive and Collections (A&C) of the Glasgow Schoo...
This paper centres on a collection donated to the Archive and Collections (A&C) of the Glasgow Schoo...
Textiles have been closely connected to the Glasgow School of Art (GSA) since it opened in 1845 and ...
Based in the United Kingdom, The Cloth was a 1980s ground-breaking collective formed by Royal Colleg...
This Q&A presentation by Fraser Taylor and Helena Britt was part of the Liberty Lates series, which ...
A student at the Glasgow School of Art in the late 1970s and early 80s, where he studied printed tex...
A student at the Glasgow School of Art in the late 1970s and early 80s, where he studied printed tex...
This is an editorial for a special issue of the Journal of Textile Design Research and Practice surr...
In 1983, Royal College of Art (RCA) students Brian Bolger, David Band, Helen Manning and Fraser Tayl...
Textile design and manufacture is intrinsic to the economic, social and cultural history of Scotland...
This short article reports on the activities undertaken due to funding received from the Textile Soc...
Textiles have been part of the activities at The Glasgow School of Art (GSA) since its formation in ...
In May 2014, Fraser Taylor donated a collection of items to GSA’s Archives and Collections. This col...
This event included a showcase of artefacts from the Glasgow School of Art’s Archives & Collections,...
This event included a showcase of artefacts from the Glasgow School of Art’s Archives & Collections,...
This paper centres on a collection donated to the Archive and Collections (A&C) of the Glasgow Schoo...
This paper centres on a collection donated to the Archive and Collections (A&C) of the Glasgow Schoo...
Textiles have been closely connected to the Glasgow School of Art (GSA) since it opened in 1845 and ...
Based in the United Kingdom, The Cloth was a 1980s ground-breaking collective formed by Royal Colleg...
This Q&A presentation by Fraser Taylor and Helena Britt was part of the Liberty Lates series, which ...
A student at the Glasgow School of Art in the late 1970s and early 80s, where he studied printed tex...
A student at the Glasgow School of Art in the late 1970s and early 80s, where he studied printed tex...
This is an editorial for a special issue of the Journal of Textile Design Research and Practice surr...
In 1983, Royal College of Art (RCA) students Brian Bolger, David Band, Helen Manning and Fraser Tayl...
Textile design and manufacture is intrinsic to the economic, social and cultural history of Scotland...