"What? No golf architects?
Just trying to add a bit of levity.
Wayne:
I realize it does seem funny but in fact what you said, which is the same thng so many of us have been saying, is pretty much the entire point of this entire analysis and criticism of Tom MacWood's essay "Arts and Crafts Golf"!
The point of this professor, and apparently those in his profession he mentioned, as well as Paul Cowley (a man whose practiced in all these art forms), me, and a number of other critics, obviously including you, is that if one just keeps on attempting to expand, and expand some subject (in this case the A&C movement) and stretching and stretching its realistic art form and the extent of its actual and historical impact far enough it seems possible to just connect all the dots into a conclusion of one of significant influence on another art form very far removed from it in the first place.
The point is if one does something like that many who understand these art forms and their various differences and distinctions from one another begin to feel that this excercise of "comparison" (looking for similarities) becomes virtually meaningless and of very little educational value or interest.
It's pretty much as simple as just that.
We have seen in Tom MacWood's recent posts, once again, that he just keeps mentioning some perhaps relatively tenuous connection between Rushkin and Morris (British A&C movement) and a man like Gustav Stickley, an American furniture maker who was not a golf architect----eg pretty damn far from furniture making! And it just goes on like that from the A&C to Gertrude Jekyll, a landscape architect who had nothing to do with golf course architecture. Or Lutyens, a building architect who may've been influenced in some ways by the British A&C movement but who had nothing whatsoever to do with golf course architecture.
And it just goes on and on lke that. It seems as if he thinks if he just keeps throwing more and more names at us we may feel that there is some universal connection to almost all art forms or almost all things. Now it's gotten to be what Tom MacWood calls "Another A/C moment" that seem to punctuate his recent posts. But we notice none of them have anything to do with golf course architecture, and they never have.
This kind of expanding and expanding his initially subject (A&C movement) and then trying to connect the seriously loose and disconnected dots (his premises, some of which are seriously unfactual anyway), one after another and on and on (a series of attempted a priori reasoning) to others things and other art forms that don't really relate to one another makes this entire theory and thesis and essay of his of little to no real historical or educational value or interest.
It's not much different from this;
Did the sun shine on the British A&C movement? Yes it did.
Does the sun shine all over the world and always has? Yes it does and has.
Does the sun shine on golf course architecture? yes it does.
THEREFORE,
The A&C Movement must have been a significant influence on golf course architecture.
Tom MacWood needs to audit a freshman class in Logic 101, in my opinion.