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art deco

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art deco

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A plate from an art deco fashion magazine of October 1921, showing a two-piece outfit with a stylish V-banded front (the ‘Banjo’) and a large floppy hat (by Antinéa) with crepe around and flowing from it. The furnishings and the articles on the tray in the foreground are intended to emphasize both the modernity and the tastefulness of the design.

Style in the decorative arts that influenced design and architecture, and is particularly associated with mass-produced domestic goods. It emerged in Europe in the 1920s and continued through the 1930s, achieving greatest popularity in the USA and France. Art deco pulls together aspects of abstraction and cubism to create a deliberately modern style, which was originally called ‘Jazz Modern’. Its features include angular, geometrical patterns and bright colours, and the use of materials such as enamel, chrome, glass, and plastic. The graphic designer Erté became fashionable for his art deco work.

Art deco pieces serve to embody the productivity and efficiency of the machine age, when mass-production popularized designs and made them accessible to many, in particular the growing middle-classes. During the art deco period product designers became involved in the process of production for the first time, as manufacturers sought to tempt customers with goods that looked up-to-date and fashionable.

In France and the USA art deco was used extensively in urban architecture such as the Chrysler Building, New York City; in interior design such as in Radio City Music Hall, New York City; and in notable designs for streamlined trains, cars, and aeroplanes. It also influenced industrial design in products such as chinaware, radios, textiles, home furnishings, jewellery, and printed matter. Its use in film sets and costumes helped promote a fascination with modernism that culminated in the 1939–40 World's Fair in New York City.



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Sales have begun at BellTel Lofts, the conversion of the former Verizon Building, an Art Deco gem, into a luxury loft condominium.
Kor is also converting the art deco Easterri Columbia building in downtown L.
Steven Heller, a senior art director at the New York Times, and Louise Fili, a New York graphic designer, have now given us Euro Deco, an illustrated survey of graphic design in the Art Deco manner from France, Italy, Germany, Spain, Holland, and Britain.
 
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