Art Deco, sometimes referred to as Deco, is
a style of visual arts, architecture and design that first appeared in France
just before World War I. Art Deco influenced the design of buildings,
furniture, jewelry, fashion, cars, movie theatres, trains, ocean liners, and
everyday objects such as radios and vacuum cleaners. It took its name, short
for Arts Décoratifs, from the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et
Industriels Modernes (International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and
Industrial Arts) held in Paris in 1925. It combined modernist styles with fine
craftsmanship and rich materials. During its heyday, Art Deco represented
luxury, glamour, exuberance, and faith in social and technological progress.
Art Deco was a pastiche of many different
styles, sometimes contradictory, united by a desire to be modern. From its
outset, Art Deco was influenced by the bold geometric forms of Cubism; the
bright colors of Fauvism and of the Ballets Russes; the updated craftsmanship
of the furniture of the eras of Louis Philippe and Louis XVI; and the exotic
styles of China and Japan, India, Persia, ancient Egypt and Maya art. It
featured rare and expensive materials, such as ebony and ivory, and exquisite
craftsmanship. The Chrysler Building and other skyscrapers of New York built during the 1920s and 1930s
are monuments of the Art Deco style.
Painting:
There was no section set aside for painting
at the 1925 Exposition. Art deco painting was by definition decorative,
designed to decorate a room or work of architecture, so few painters worked
exclusively in the style, but two painters are closely associated with Art
Deco. Jean Dupas painted Art Deco murals for the Bordeaux Pavilion at the 1925
Decorative Arts Exposition in Paris ,
and also painted the picture over the fireplace in the Maison de la
Collectioneur exhibit at the 1925 Exposition, which featured furniture by
Ruhlmann and other prominent Art Deco designers. His murals were also prominent
in the decor of the French ocean liner SS Normandie. His work was purely
decorative, designed as a background or accompaniment to other elements of the
decor. The other painter closely associated with the style is Tamara de
Lempicka. Born in Poland in
an aristocratic family, she emigrated to Paris
after the Russian Revolution. There she became a student of the artist Maurice
Denis of the movement called Les Nabis and the Cubist André Lhote and borrowed
many elements from their styles. She painted almost exclusively portraits in a
realistic, dynamic and colorful Art Deco style.
In the 1930s a dramatic new form of Art
Deco painting appeared in the United
States . During the Great Depression, the
Federal Art Project of the Works Progress Administration was created to give
work to unemployed artists. Many were given the task of decorating government
buildings, hospitals and schools. There was no specific art deco style used in
the murals; artists engaged to paint murals in government buildings came from
many different schools, from American regionalism to social realism; they
included Reginald Marsh, Rockwell Kent and the Mexican painter Diego Rivera.
The murals were Art Deco because they were all decorative and related to the
activities in the building or city where they were painted: Reginald Marsh and
Rockwell Kent both decorated U.S. postal buildings, and showed postal employees
at work while Diego Rivera depicted automobile factory workers for the Detroit
Institute of Arts. Diego Rivera's mural American Progress for Rockefeller Center
featured an unauthorized portrait of Lenin. When Rivera refused to remove
Lenin, the painting was destroyed and a new mural was painted by the Spanish
artist Josep Maria Sert.
Sculpture:
Most of the sculpture of the Art Deco
period was, as the name suggests, purely decorative; it was designed not for
museums, but to ornament office buildings, government buildings, public
squares, and private salons. It was almost always representational, usually of
heroic or allegorical figures related to the purpose of the building; the
themes were usually chosen by the patron, and abstract sculpture for decoration
was extremely rare. It was frequently attached to facade of buildings,
particularly over the entrance.
Allegorical sculptures of the dance and
music by Antoine Bourdelle were the essential decorative feature of the
earliest Art Deco landmark in Paris , the Théâtre
des Champs-Elysées in Paris ,
in 1912. The sculptor Aristide Maillol reinvented the classical ideal for his
statue of the River (1939), now at the Museum
of Modern Art in New York . In the 1930s, a whole team of
sculptors made sculpture for the 1937 Exposition Internationale des Arts et
Techniques dans la Vie Moderne at Chaillot. The buildings of the Exposition
were covered with low-relief sculpture, statues. Alfred Janniot made the relief
sculptures on the facade of the Palais de Tokyo. The Paris City Museum of
Modern Art, and the esplanade in front of the Palais de Chaillot, facing the Eiffel Tower ,
was crowded with new statuary by Charles Malfray, Henry Arnold, and many
others.
In the United
States , many European sculptors trained at the Ecole des
Beaux Arts in Paris ,
came to work; they included Gutzon Borglum, sculptor of Mount Rushmore Lincoln
Memorial. Other American sculptors, including Harriet Whitney Frishmuth, had
studied with Auguste Rodin in Paris .
The 1929 stock market crash largely destroyed the market for monumental
sculpture, but one grand project remained; the new Rockefeller Center .
The American sculptors Lee Lawrie and Paul Manship designed heroic allegorical
figures for facade and plaza. In San
Francisco , Ralph Stackpole provided sculpture for the
facade of the new San Francisco Stock Exchange building.
One of the best known and certainly the
largest Art Deco sculpture is the Christ the Redeemer by the French sculptor
Paul Landowski, completed between 1922 and 1931, located on a mountain top
overlooking Rio de Janeiro ,
Brazil .
François Pompon was a pioneer of modern stylized animalier sculpture. He was
not fully recognized for his artistic accomplishments until the age of 67 at
the Salon d'Automne of 1922 with the work Ours blanc, also known as The White
Bear, now in the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.
Many early Art Deco sculptures were small,
designed to decorate salons. One genre of this sculpture was called the
Chryselephantine statuette, named for a style of ancient Greek temple statues
made of gold and ivory. One of the best-known Art Deco salon sculptors was the
Romanian-born Demétre Chiparus, who produced colorful small sculptures of
dancers. Other notable salon sculptors included Ferdinand Preiss, Josef
Lorenzl, Alexander Kelety, Dorothea Charol and Gustav Schmidtcassel.
Parallel with these more neoclassical
sculptors, more avant-garde and abstract sculptors were at work in Paris and New
York . The most prominent were Constantin Brâncuși,
Joseph Csaky, Alexander Archipenko, Henri Laurens, Jacques Lipchitz, Gustave
Miklos, Jean Lambert-Rucki, Jan et Joël Martel, Chana Orloff, and Pablo
Gargallo.
Graphic arts:
The Art Deco style appeared early in the
graphic arts, in the years just before World War I. It appeared in Paris in the posters and
the costume designs of Leon Bakst for the Ballets Russes, and in the catalogs
of the fashion designers Paul Poiret. The illustrations of Georges Barbier, and
Georges Lepape and the images in the fashion magazine La Gazette du bon ton
perfectly captured the elegance and sensuality of the style. In the 1920s, the
look changed; the fashions stressed were more casual, sportive and daring, with
the woman models usually smoking cigarettes. American fashion magazines such as
Vogue, Vanity Fair and Harper's Bazaar quickly picked up the new style and
popularized it in the United
States . It also influenced the work of
American book illustrators such as Rockwell Kent . In Germany , the most famous poster
artist of the period was Ludwig Hohlwein, who created colorful and dramatic
posters for music festivals, beers, and, late in his career, for the Nazi
Party.
During the Art Nouveau period, posters
usually advertised theatrical products or cabarets. In the 1920s, travel
posters, made for steamship lines and airlines, became extremely popular. The
style changed notably in the 1920s, to focus attention on the product being
advertised. The images became simpler, precise, more linear, more dynamic, and
were often placed against a single color background. In France popular
Art Deco designers included, Charles Loupot and Paul Colin, who became famous
for his posters of American singer and dancer Josephine Baker. Jean Carlu
designed posters for Charlie Chaplin movies, soaps, and theaters; in the late
1930s he emigrated to the United
States , where, during the World War, he
designed posters to encourage war production. The designer Charles Gesmar
became famous making posters for the singer Mistinguett and for Air France . Among
the best known French Art Deco poster designers was Cassandre, who made the
celebrated poster of the ocean liner SS Normandie in 1935.
In the 1930s a new genre of posters
appeared in the United
States during the Great Depression. The
Federal Art Project hired American artists to create posters to promote tourism
and cultural events.
Architecture:
The architectural style of art deco made
its debut in Paris in 1903-04, with the
construction of two apartment buildings in Paris , one by Auguste Perret on rue Trétaigne
and the other on rue Benjamin Franklin by Henri Sauvage. The two young
architects used reinforced concrete for the first time in Paris residential buildings; the new
buildings had clean lines, rectangular forms, and no decoration on the facades;
they marked a clean break with the art nouveau style. Between 1910 and 1913,
Perret used his experience in concrete apartment buildings to construct the
Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, 15 avenue Montaigne. Between 1925 and 1928 he
constructed the new art deco facade of the La Samaritaine department store in Paris .
After the First World War, art deco
buildings of steel and reinforced concrete began to appear in large cities
across Europe and the United
States . In the United States the style was most
commonly used for office buildings, government buildings, movie theaters, and
railroad stations. It sometimes was combined with other styles; Los Angeles City Hall
combined Art Deco with a roof based on the ancient Greek Mausoleum at Halicarnassus , while the Los Angeles railroad station combined Deco
with Spanish mission architecture. Art Deco elements also appeared in
engineering projects, including the towers of the Golden Gate Bridge
and the intake towers of Hoover Dam. In the 1920s and 1930s it became a truly
international style, with examples including the Palacio de Bellas Artes (Palace of Fine Arts )
in Mexico City by Federico Mariscal (es), the
Mayakovskaya Metro Station in Moscow and the National Diet
Building in Tokyo by Watanabe Fukuzo.
The Art Deco style was not limited to
buildings on land; the ocean liner SS Normandie, whose first voyage was in
1935, featured Art Deco design, including a dining room whose ceiling and
decoration were made of glass by Lalique.
Movie palaces:
Many of the best surviving examples of Art
Deco are movie theaters built in the 1920s and 1930s. The Art Deco period
coincided with the conversion of silent films to sound, and movie companies
built enormous theaters in major cities to capture the huge audience that came
to see movies. Movie palaces in the 1920s often combined exotic themes with art
deco style; Grauman's Egyptian Theater in Hollywood
(1922) was inspired by ancient Egyptian tombs and pyramids, while the Fox
Theater in Bakersfield , California attached a tower in California
Mission style to an Art Deco hall. The largest of all is Radio
City Music
Hall in New York City ,
which opened in 1932. Originally designed as a stage theater, it quickly
transformed into a movie theater, which could seat 6,015 persons The interior
design by Donald Deskey used glass, aluminum, chrome, and leather to create a
colorful escape from reality The Paramount Theater in Oakland, California, by
Timothy Pflueger, had a colorful ceramic facade a lobby four stories high, and
separate Art Deco smoking rooms for gentlemen and ladies. Similar grand palaces
appeared in Europe . The Grand Rex in Paris (1932), with its imposing tower, was the largest
movie theater in Europe . The Gaumont State
Cinema in London (1937) had a tower modeled
after the Empire State building, covered with
cream-colored ceramic tiles and an interior in an Art Deco-Italian Renaissance
style. The Paramount Theater in Shanghai ,
China (1933)
was originally built as a dance hall called The gate of 100 pleasures; it was
converted to a movie theater after the Communist Revolution in 1949, and now is
a ballroom and disco. In the 1930s Italian architects built a small movie
palace, the Cinema Impero, in Asmara in what is
now Eritrea .
Today, many of the movie theaters have been subdivided into multiplexes, but
others have been restored and are used as cultural centers in their
communities.
Streamline Moderne:
In the late 1930s, a new variety of Art
Deco architecture became common; it was called Streamline Moderne or simply
Streamline, or, in France, the Style Paqueboat, or Ocean Liner style. Buildings
in the style were had rounded corners, long horizontal lines; they were built
of reinforced concrete, and were almost always white; and sometimes had
nautical features, such as railings that resembled those on a ship. The rounded
corner was not entirely new; it had appeared in Berlin
in 1923 in the Mossehaus by Erich Mendelsohn, and later in the Hoover Building ,
an industrial complex in the London
suburb of Perivale. In the United States, it became most closely associated
with transport; Streamline moderne was rare in office buildings, but was often
used for bus stations and airport terminals, such as terminal at La Guardia
airport in New York City that handled the first transatlantic flights, via the
PanAm clipper flying boats; and in roadside architecture, such as gas stations
and diners. In the late 1930s a series of diners, modeled after streamlined
railroad cars, were produced and installed in towns in New
England ; at least two examples still remain and are now registered
historic buildings.
Decoration and motifs:
Decoration in the Art Deco period went
through several distinct phases. Between 1910 and 1920, as Art Nouveau was
exhausted, design styles saw a return to tradition, particularly in the work of
Paul Iribe. In 1912 André Vera published an essay in the magazine L'Art
Décoratif calling for a return to the craftsmanship and materials of earlier
centuries, and using a new repertoire of forms taken from nature, particularly
baskets and garlands of fruit and flowers. A second tendency of Art Deco, also
from 1910 to 1920, was inspired by the bright colors of the artistic movement
known as the Fauves and by the colorful costumes and sets of the Ballets
Russes. This style was often expressed with exotic materials such as sharkskin,
mother of pearl, ivory, tinted leather, lacquered and painted wood, and
decorative inlays on furniture that emphasized its geometry. This period of the
style reached its high point
in the 1925 Paris Exposition of Decorative Arts. In the late 1920s and the
1930s, the decorative style changed, inspired by new materials and
technologies. It became sleeker and less ornamental. Furniture, like
architecture, began to have rounded edges and to take on a polished,
streamlined look, taken from the streamline moderne style. New materials, such
as chrome-plated steel, aluminum and bakelite, an early form of plastic, began
to appear in furniture and decoration.
Throughout the Art Deco period, and
particularly in the 1930s, the motifs of the decor expressed the function of
the building. Theaters were decorated with sculpture which illustrated music,
dance, and excitement; power companies showed sunrises, the Chrysler building
showed stylized hood ornaments; The friezes of Palais de la Porte Dorée at the
1931 Paris Colonial Exposition showed the faces of the different nationalities
of French colonies. The Streamline style made it appear that the building
itself was in motion. The WPA murals of the 1930s featured ordinary people;
factory workers, postal workers, families and farmers, in place of classical
heroes.
Furniture:
French furniture from 1910 until the early
1920s was largely an updating of French traditional furniture styles, and the
art nouveau designs of Louis Majorelle, Charles Plumet and other manufacturers.
French furniture manufacturers felt threatened by the growing popularity of
German manufacturers and styles, particularly the Biedermeier style, which was
simple and clean-lined. The French designer Frantz Jourdain, the President of
the Paris Salon d'Automne, invited designers from Munich to participate in the 1910 Salon.
French designers saw the new German style, and decided to meet the German
challenge. The French designers decided to present new French styles in the
Salon of 1912. The rules of the Salon indicated that only modern styles would
be permitted. All of the major French furniture designers took part in Salon:
Paul Follot, Paul Iribe, Maurice Dufrene, André Groult, André Mare and Louis
Süe took part, presenting new works that updated the traditional French styles
of Louis XVI and Louis Philippe with more angular corners inspired by Cubism
and brighter colors inspired by Fauvism and the Nabis.
The painter André Mare and furniture
designer Louis Suë both participated the 1912 Salon. After the War the two men
joined together to form their own company, formally called the Compagnie des
Arts Française, but usually known simply as Suë and Mare. Unlike the prominent
art nouveau designers like Louis Majorelle, who personally designed every
piece, they assembled a team of skilled craftsmen and produced complete
interior designs, including furniture, glassware, carpets, ceramics, wallpaper
and lighting. Their work featured bright colors and furniture and fine woods,
such ebony encrusted with mother of pearl, abalone and silvered metal to create
bouquets of flowers. They designed everything from the interiors of ocean
liners to perfume bottles for the label of Jean Patou.The firm prospered in the
early 1920s, but the two men were better craftsmen than businessmen. The firm
was sold in 1928, and both men left.
The most prominent furniture designer at
the 1925 Decorative Arts Exposition was Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann, from Alsace . He first
exhibited his works at the 1913 Autumn Salon, then had his own pavilion, the
"House of the Rich Collector", at the 1925 Exposition. He used only
most rare and expensive materials, including ebony, mahogany, rosewood, ambon
and other exotic woods, decorated with inlays of ivory, tortoise shell, mother
of pearl, Little pompoms of silk decorated the handles of drawers of the
cabinets. His furniture was based upon 18th century models, but simplified and
reshaped. In all of his work, the interior structure of the furniture was
completely concealed. The framework usually of oak, was completely covered with
an overlay of thin strips of wood, then covered by a second layer of strips of
rare and expensive woods. This was then covered with a veneer and polished, so
that the piece looked as if it had been cut out of a single block of wood. Contrast
to the dark wood was provided by inlays of ivory, and ivory key plates and
handles. According to Ruhlmann, armchairs had to be designed differently
according to the functions of the rooms where they appeared; living room
armchairs were designed to be welcoming, office chairs comfortable, and salon
chairs voluptuous. Only a small number of pieces of each design of furniture
was made, and the average price of one of his beds or cabinets was greater than
the price of an average house.
Jules Leleu was a traditional furniture
designer who moved smoothly into Art Deco in the 1920s; he designed the
furniture for the dining room of the Elysee
Palace , and for the
first-class cabins of the steamship Normandie. his style was characterized by
the use of ebony, Macassar wood, walnut, with decoration of plaques of ivory
and mother of pearl. He introduced the style of lacquered art deco furniture at
the end of in the late 1920s, and in the late 1930s introduced furniture made
of metal with panels of smoked glass. In Italy, the designer Gio Ponti was
famous for his streamlined designs. In the United States ,
The costly and exotic furniture Ruhlmann
and other traditionalists infuriated modernists, including the architect Le
Corbusier, causing him to write a famous series of articles denouncing the arts
décoratif style. He attacked furniture made only for the rich, and called upon
designers to create furniture made with inexpensive materials and modern style,
which ordinary people could afford. He designed his own chairs, created to be
inexpensive and mass-produced.
In the 1930s, furniture designs adapted to
the form, with smoother surfaces and curved forms. The masters of the late
style included Donald Deskey was one of the most influential designers; he
created the interior of the Radio
City Music
Hall . He used a mixture of traditional and very
modern materials, including aluminum, chrome, and bakelite, an early form of
plastic.
Design:
Streamline was a variety of Art Deco which
emerged during the mid-1930s. It was influenced by modern aerodynamic
principles developed for aviation and ballistics to reduce air friction at high
velocities. The bullet shapes were applied by designers to cars, trains, ships,
and even objects not intended to move, such as refrigerators, gas pumps, and
buildings. One of the first production vehicles in this style was the Chrysler
Airflow of 1933. It was unsuccessful commercially, but the beauty and functionality
of its design set a precedent; meant modernity. It continued to be used in car
design well after World War II.
New industrial materials began to influence
design of cars and household objects. These included aluminum, chrome, and bakelite,
an early form of plastic. Bakelite could be easily molded into different forms,
and soon was used in telephones, radios and other appliances.
Ocean liners also adopted a style of Art
Deco, known in French as the Style Paquebot, or "Ocean Liner Style".
The most famous example was the SS Normandie, which made its first
transatlantic trip in 1935. It was designed particularly to bring wealthy
Americans to Paris
to shop. The cabins and salons featured the latest Art Deco furnishings and
decoration. The Grand Salon of the ship, which was the restaurant for
first-class passengers, was bigger than the Hall of Mirrors of the Palace of Versailles . It was illuminated by
electric lights within twelve pillars of Lalique crystal; thirty-six matching
pillars lined the walls. This was one of the earliest examples of illumination
being directly integrated into architecture. The style of ships was soon
adapted to buildings. A notable example is found on the San
Francisco waterfront, where the Maritime Museum
building, built as a public bath in 1937, resembles a ferryboat, with ship
railings and rounded corners. The Star Ferry Terminal in Hong
Kong also used a variation of the style.
Jewelry:
In the 1920s and 1930s, designers including
René Lalique and Cartier tried reduce the traditional dominance of diamonds by
introducing more colorful gemstones, such as small emeralds, rubies and
sapphires. They also placed greater emphasis on very elaborate and elegant
settings, featuring less-expensive materials such as enamel, glass, horn and
ivory. Diamonds themselves were cut in less traditional forms; the 1925
Exposition saw a large number of diamonds cut in the form of tiny rods or
matchsticks. The settings for diamonds also changed; More and more often
jewelers used platinum instead of gold, since it was strong and flexible, and
could set clusters of stones. Jewelers also began to use more dark materials,
such as enamels and black onyx, which provided a higher contrast with diamonds.
Jewelry became much more colorful and
varied in style. Cartier and the firm of Boucheron combined diamonds with
colorful other gemstones cut into the form of leaves, fruit or flowers. to make
brooches, rings, earrings, clips and pendants Far Eastern themes also became
popular; plaques of jade and coral were combined with platinum and diamonds,
and vanity cases, cigarette cases and powder boxes were decorated with Japanese
and Chinese landscapes made with mother of pearl, enamel and lacquer.
Rapidly changing fashions in clothing
brought new styles of jewelry. Sleeveless dresses of the 1920s meant that arms
needed decoration, and designers quickly created bracelets of gold, silver and
platinum encrusted with lapis-lazuli, onyx, coral, and other colorful stones;
Other bracelets were intended for the upper arms, and several bracelets were
often worn at the same time. The short haircuts of women in the twenties called
for elaborate deco earring designs. As women began to smoke in public,
designers created very ornate cigarette cases and ivory cigarette holders. The
invention of the wrist-watch before World War I inspired jewelers to create
extraordinary decorated watches, encrusted with diamonds and plated with
enamel, gold and silver. Pendant watches, hanging from a ribbon, also became
fashionable.
The established jewelry houses of Paris in
the period, Cartier, Chaumet, Georges Fouquet, Mauboussin, and Van Cleef &
Arpels all created jewellry and objects in the new fashion. The firm of Chaumet
made highly geometric cigarette boxes, cigarette lighters, pillboxes and
notebooks, made of hard stones decorated with jade, lapis lazuli, diamonds and
sapphires. They were joined by many young new designers, each with his own idea
of deco. Raymond Templier designed pieces with highly intricate geometric
patterns, including silver earrings that looked like skyscrapers. Gerard Sandoz
was only 18 when he started to design jewelry in 1921; he designed many
celebrated pieces based on the smooth and polished look of modern machinery.
The glass designer René Lalique also entered the field, creating pendants of
fruit, flowers, frogs, fairies of mermaids made of sculpted glass in bright
colors, hanging on cords of silk with tassels. The jeweler Paul Brandt
contrasted rectangular and triangular patterns, and embedded pearls in lines on
onyx plaques. Jean Despres made necklaces of contrasting colors by bringing
together silver and black lacquer, or gold with lapis lazuli. Many of his
designs looked like highly polished pieces of machines. Jean Dunand was also inspired
by modern machinery, combined with bright reds and blacks contrasting with
polished metal.
Glass art:
Like the Art Nouveau period before it, Art
Deco was an exceptional period for fine glass and other decorative objects,
designed to fit their architectural surroundings. The most famous producer of
glass objects was René Lalique, whose works, from vases to hood ornaments for
automobiles, became symbols of the period. He had made ventures into glass
before World War I, designing bottles for the perfumes of François Coty, but he
did not begin serious production of art glass until after World War I. In 1918,
at the age of 58, he bought a large glass works in Combs-la-Ville and began to
manufacture both artistic and practical glass objects. He treated glass as a
form of sculpture, and created statuettes, vases, bowls, lamps and ornaments.
He used demi-crystal rather than lead crystal, which was softer and easier to
form, though not as lustrous. He sometimes used colored glass, but more often
used opalescent glass, where part or the whole of the outer surface was stained
with a wash. Lalique provided the decorative glass panels, lights and
illuminated glass ceilings for the ocean liners SS Ile de France in 1927 and
the SS Normandie in 1935, and for some of the first-class sleeping cars of the
French railroads. At the 1925 Exposition of Decorative Arts, he had his own
pavilion, designed a dining room with a table settling and matching glass
ceiling for the Sèvres Pavilion, and designed a glass fountain for the
courtyard of the Cours des Métier, a slender glass column which spouted water
from the sides and was illuminated at night.
Other notable Art Deco glass manufacturers
included Marius-Ernest Sabino, who specialized in figurines, vases, bowls, and glass
sculptures of fish, nudes, and animals. For these he often used an opalescent
glass which could change from white to blue to amber, depending upon the light.
His vases and bowls featured molded friezes of animals, nudes or busts of women
with fruit or flowers. His work was less subtle but more colorful than that of
Lalique.
Other notable Deco glass designers included
Edmond Etling, who also used bright opalescent colors, often with geometric
patterns and sculpted nudes; Albert Simonet, and Aristide Colotte and Maurice
Marinot, who was known for his deeply etched sculptural bottles and vases. The
firm of Daum from the city of Nancy ,
which had been famous for its Art Nouveau glass, produced a line of Deco vases
and glass sculpture, solid, geometric and chunky in form. More delicate
multicolored works were made by Gabriel Argy-Rousseau, who produced delicately
colored vases with sculpted butterflies and nymphs, and Francois Decorchemont,
whose vases were streaked and marbled.
The Great Depression ruined a large part of
the decorative glass industry, which depended upon wealthy clients. Some
artists turned to designing stained glass windows for churches. In 1937, the
Steuben glass company began the practice of commissioning famous artists to
produce glassware. Louis Majorelle, famous for his Art Nouveau furniture,
designed a remarkable Art Deco stained glass window portraying steel workers
for the offices of the Aciéries de Longwy, a steel mill in Longwy, France.
Metal art:
Art Deco artists produced a wide variety of
practical objects in the Art Deco style, made of industrial materials from
traditional wrought iron to chrome-plated steel. The American artist Norman Bel
Geddes designed a cocktail set resembling a skyscraper made of chrome-plated steel.
Raymond Subes designed an elegant metal grille for the entrance of the Palais
de la Porte Dorée, the centerpiece of the 1931 Paris Colonial Exposition. The
French sculptor Jean Dunand produced magnificent doors on the theme "The
Hunt", covered with gold leaf and paint on plaster (1935).
Influences:
Art Deco was not a single style, but a
collection of different and sometimes contradictory styles. In architecture,
Art Deco was the successor to and reaction against Art Nouveau, a style which
flourished in Europe between 1895 and 1900,
and also gradually replaced the Beaux-Arts and neoclassical that were
predominant in European and American architecture. In 1905 Eugène Grasset wrote
and published Méthode de Composition Ornementale, Éléments Rectilignes, in
which he systematically explored the decorative (ornamental) aspects of
geometric elements, forms, motifs and their variations, in contrast with (and
as a departure from) the undulating Art Nouveau style of Hector Guimard, so
popular in Paris a few years earlier. Grasset stressed the principle that
various simple geometric shapes like triangles and squares are the basis of all
compositional arrangements. The reinforced concrete buildings of Auguste Perret
and Henri Sauvage, and particularly the Theatre des Champs-Elysees, offered a
new form of construction and decoration which was copied worldwide.
In decoration, many different styles were
borrowed and used by Art Deco. They included pre-modern art from around the
world and observable at the Musée du Louvre, Musée de l'Homme and the Musée
national des Arts d'Afrique et d'Océanie. There was also popular interest in
archeology due to excavations at Pompeii , Troy , and the tomb of the 18th
dynasty Pharaoh Tutankhamun. Artists and designers integrated motifs from
ancient Egypt , Mesopotamia , Greece ,
Rome , Asia, Mesoamerica and Oceania
with Machine Age elements.
Other styles borrowed included Russian
Constructivism and Italian Futurism, as well as Orphism, Functionalism, and
Modernism in general. Art Deco also used the clashing colors and designs of
Fauvism, notably in the work of Henri Matisse and André Derain, inspired the
designs of art deco textiles, wallpaper, and painted ceramics. It took ideas
from the high fashion vocabulary of the period, which featured geometric
designs, chevrons, zigzags, and stylized bouquets of flowers. It was influenced
by discoveries in Egyptology, and growing interest in the Orient and in African
art. From 1925 onwards, it was often inspired by a passion for new machines,
such as airships, automobiles and ocean liners, and by 1930 this influence
resulted in the style called streamline moderne.
From Wikipedia
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_Deco
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