Ralph Radcliffe Whitehead
Ralph Radcliffe Whitehead was an English philanthropist and the founder and chief benefactor of the Byrdcliffe Arts and Crafts Colony located in Woodstock, New York.
Early life and influences
Whitehead was born in 1854 in Saddleworth, Yorkshire, England, to Francis Frederick and Isabella Dalglish Whitehead. His father was a wealthy textile mill owner and industrialist from whom he eventually received a large inheritance. Whitehead attended Harrow School and Balliol College, Oxford, receiving his Master of Arts degree in 1880. While at Oxford, he studied under John Ruskin, who inspired Whitehead's interest in forming a utopian society based on art, craftsmanship, and unity. His vision was further developed by his acquaintance with William Morris, a principal exponent of the Arts and Crafts movement. Little is known about Whitehead's activities in the 1880s, but at some point he married an Austrian woman, Marie.Move to America
In 1890, Whitehead met Jane Byrd McCall, a socialite and aspiring artist from Philadelphia, while she was touring Italy with her mother and sister. She had also studied under Ruskin at Oxford, where they had first met. They kept their courtship a secret until Whitehead could establish residency in Berlin in order to obtain a divorce under German law. In 1892, Whitehead visited the United States, where he married Jane McCall. The couple spent 1893 in Europe, where Jane studied painting at the Académie Julian. They then returned to America, settling in Montecito, California, and building a mansion on a 70-acre mountaintop estate called Arcady. Their sons, Ralph Jr. and Geoffrey Jocelyn, were born in 1899 and 1901.From the outset, Whitehead dreamed of establishing a community based on the Arts and Crafts movement. They explored potential locations in Oregon and North Carolina. With the aid of friends Hervey White and Bolton Coit Brown, he founded his colony at Woodstock in the bucolic Hudson Valley in 1902. During the first decade or so of the twentieth century, the community flourished and Woodstock became a destination for the arts for decades to come.
Byrdcliffe colony
Byrdcliffe occupied in Woodstock and quickly became a haven for artists known and unknown—100 by 1905. Thirty buildings sprang up, including studios, barns, cottages, and a library, as well as the White Pines manor house where the Whitehead family lived. It stood as a "rural, utopian ideal based on the brotherhood of artistic collaboration" and focused on the "art of living through creative manual work." Notable residents and visitors included John Burroughs, John Dewey, Arnold Dolmetsch, Blanche Lazzell, Eva Watson-Schütze, Ellen Gates Starr, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Owen Wister, Zulma Steele, and James T. Shotwell. Residents produced furniture, pottery, textiles, paintings, and photographs. Whitehead himself was particularly interested in furniture, pottery, and photography.Byrdcliffe never became a self-sustaining community. Its failure is variously attributed to Whitehead's limited artistic ability, his struggles to establish a viable market for the community's artistic outputs, and resentment over Whitehead's aloofness and benevolent despotism. Residents began drifting away to smaller communities or their own homes. Hervey White broke with Whitehead in 1905 and started a popular rival artists' colony called the Maverick on a farm across town, while the Art Students League of New York established a summer school of painting in Woodstock in 1906.