By Leeds Museums & Galleries
Purchased with support from the Art Fund, Arts Council England/V&A Purchase Grant Fund and the Leeds Art Fund.
Pattern design SB 1471 (1970/1975) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
The Sheila Bownas collection of hand –painted designs offers a wonderful glimpse into the diverse and changing fashions of pattern during the middle of the 20th century.
Sheila Bownas (c. 1945) by UnknownLeeds Museums & Galleries
In the collection are nearly 200 hand painted pattern designs dating from the 1950s to the 1970s. The designs were all created by Sheila Bownas (1925 – 2007), a freelance designer who lived and worked in Yorkshire.
Draft sketches (1968/1972) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
Alongside the finished designs are also lots of sketches. These preliminary drawings offer a unique insight into the processes Sheila used when it came to designing patterns.
A popular, talented designer
Sheila Bownas made a successful living selling her patterns to numerous manufacturers to be made into wallpapers, textiles for furniture and fashion and even vinyl floor coverings. She had a great ability to create a range of styles from contemporary abstract patterns to more traditional floral designs.
Pattern design SB 492 (1960/1970) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
Sheila’s artistic talent meant she could adapt her style to meet the different tastes of the market. Her designs are not necessarily revolutionary but instead show the styles popular with the general public for decorating their homes.
Contemporary Abstract Patterns
Sheila Bownas was working during an exciting time for British design. Her bright bold designs reflect the British public's need for optimism, as the country rebuilt itself after the devastation of the Second World War.
Pattern design SB 216 (1950/1959) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
Sheila’s early designs show the radical shift towards using purely geometrical shapes for pattern. Pioneered by the leading designer of the time, Lucienne Day, this style was first showcased at the Festival of Britain in 1951.
Pattern design SB 471 (1960/1970) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
Sheila clearly admired Day’s work and it is no coincidence that she went on to sell her designs to many of the same companies as Day.
Pattern design SB 477 (1960/1970) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
In the 1950s not everyone was ready to buy the revolutionary modernist designs of the day. It took time this style to become popular with the general public and it was designers like Sheila who helped to do this.
Pattern design SB 452 (1960/1970) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
In the 1960s Sheila was still creating 1950s style abstract patterns. It is her designs which are more likely to have ended up in the everyday home.
Traditional Floral Designs
Alongside the more contemporary abstract designs Sheila also produced many patterns using familiar floral motifs. These patterns with their soft colours and were probably designed to appeal more to traditional tastes.
Pattern design SB 310 (1960/1970) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
Floral designs were hugely popular in everyday fashions of the late 1950s to early 1960s. It might have been this market which Sheila was aiming for with patterns such as this.
Pattern design SB 510 (1960/1970) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
Letters from the family archive show Sheila successfully sold her designs to the major high street retailer of clothing Marks and Spencer. Her designs might have ended up on dresses or skirts.
Pattern design SB 330 (1960/1970) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
Other floral designs, show Bownas’ skills at combining traditional pattern design ideas with a contemporary feel, through the use of bright, bold colours.
Botanical Study (1962) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
Sheila's skills as a floral artist were not only applied to pattern design. In 1962 she was commissioned by the Natural History Museum, London, to produce a set of intricate botanical studies for an exhibition. This later led to a six year assignment for for the Botanical Society for the British Isles (BSBI).
Draft sketch for pattern (1960/1970) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
The influence of these commissions can be seen in many of Sheila’s designs and particularly those from the 1960s. She clearly applied her skills of botanical drawing to pattern design.
Draft sketch for pattern (1960/1970) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
Using her skills to created bolder stylized version flowers which would work as pattern on textiles.
Bold explosion of colour
Sheila's style becomes bolder throughout the 1970s. Her strong use of colour reflects the changing tastes of the time.
Pattern design SB 1486 (1970/1975) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
The early 1970s seems to have a particularly prolific period of design for Sheila Bownas. This productivity coincides with the rising popularity of DIY. As people started to redecorate their homes themselves the demand for wallpapers grew rapidly and the brighter and bolder the designs the better.
Pattern design (1970/1975) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
During this period Sheila designed a series of energetic patterns painted straight onto grey sugar paper.
Pattern design (1970/1975) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
Her simple use of bold shapes painted in tones of black and white really show her skills and knowledge of pattern repeat.
Pattern design (1970/1975) by Sheila Catherine BownasLeeds Museums & Galleries
At some point in the 1970s Sheila stopped designing patterns to sell. But her love of art did not end and she continued to paint and draw right up until her death in 2007 at the age of 82.
With thanks to Chelsea Cefai and Sheila Bownas' Family.
The Sheila Bownas archive was purchased with support from the Art Fund, Arts Council England/V&A Purchase Grant Fund and the Leeds Art Fund.
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