Rose Fulbright

Rose Fulbright

Rose Fulbright is an artist with a profound family heritage. She is the granddaughter of celebrated artist Susan Williams-Ellis, who was also the founder of world-renowned Portmeirion Pottery. Her great-grandfather, Sir Clough Williams-Ellis, was the great British architect and pioneer of ecological conservation, most famous for his life's work, Portmeirion Village, in Snowdonia.

 

Working with a recognisable palette of sophisticated yet energetic and joyous colour, Rose fine-tuned her creative techniques at the Parsons School in Paris and at the London College of Fashion, where she earned a First-Class Honours Degree.

 

Today, Rose is a multi-disciplinary artist who has an adept ability to create vibrant beauty on any surface. From wall murals to pottery, loungewear to furniture, Rose works with the philosophy pioneered by William Morris, then adopted by Matisse and the Bloomsbury Omega workshops, that fine art and decorative arts are and should be intertwined to reach as many people as possible.

 

“Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be beautiful or believe to be useful.” – William Morris