| Art Deco
During the period between the two World
Wars, an eclectic design style now referred to as Art
Deco developed. The name was coined in the 1960s from the French “Exposition
Internationle des Art Decorifs et Industriels et Moderne” which
was instigated in 1925 by the French Government to prove that
despite the First World War, France was at the forefront of
style and design.
The Exposition launched a new look which
celebrated living in the modern world. Almost instantly a catalogue
of recognisable motifs and materials which could be applied
to anything from a cup and saucer to a New York skyscraper
became popular.
The term “Art Deco” is used today
to refer to a mixture of styles from the 1920s through to the
1940s.
Art Deco… an era
of contradictions
Throughout the Roaring
Twenties and the Great Depression of the 1930s, the Art
Deco style infused the everyday world with an elegant style of cool
sophistication.
Singers and songwriters entertained audiences
through the new medium of radio, and Hollywood musicals offered
hope of better times and a temporary
escape from daily troubles.
Speed became a metaphor for modern times.Travel
was in the news, with great ocean liners racing the Atlantic,
trains crossing continents and cars and planes being developed.
Despite
its short life in the era between the two World Wars, “Art
Deco” was very much the style
of it’s time. Exciting,
vibrant, dynamic, decorative, popular, successful, and always
surprising, it is a constant source of inspiration to designers
even today. Art Deco was universal and more important, it was
international, crossing frontiers and bringing
together styles
drawn from all sorts of sources.
The really great thing is that
it was for everyone. Whether you lived in a suburban cottage
or a mansion, whether you shopped at Woolworth’s or Tiffany’s,
Art Deco was there for you. And, in a period of uncertainty,
the appeal of a universal modern style was certainly understandable.
Characteristics of Art Deco design
The term “Art Deco” represents a “graciousness
of form” and features sleek
geometric designs and simplicity geared to mass production, often combined with vibrant colours
and simple shapes and celebrating the rise of commerce and technology.
Luxurious objects made of exotic materials to mass-produced streamlined
items became available to a growing middle class.
For Art Deco,
look for.....
- clean uncluttered lines in furniture
and shapes
- bright geometric shapes, such as shells, sun rays,
thunderbolts, chevrons and ziggurats
- use of new materials such
as plastic, steel, tinted glass, wood veneers, leather, sharkskin,
fur and exotic woods
- sophisticated colours like purple, mauve,
peach, grey-green, turquoise, orange ,black silver, and eau-de-nil.
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