and look at these colors; it might as well be spring. after the first world war, design was bursting out all over, nature, color, and the drift towards abstraction had become normalized to the western eye, and there was reason to celebrate.

"after the austerity of the war years there was a move towards strong colors and a touch of the exotic."
1these styles, these artists, are not new to this blog; chinoiserie is more mentioned in that book than japonisme, but it's traces are evident.
designers from the silver studio "show their interest in the formal clarity of japanese designs. particularly influential were the beautifully rhythmic, conventionalized patterns of woodblocks and stencils. arthur silver himself was deeply interested in japanese art, subscribing to bing's
artistic japan, and collecting japanese prints and stencil sheets."

the book is quite clear in reminding us that these scrumptious designs were available only to the rich. the rich had more a taste for them; the rich could afford them. i had a similar realization in perusing the 1920s fashions on the met's site. had i been there, i might have worked where i helped design them, but i would never ever wear one. i would never hang these papers on my walls.

fortunately that ache can be assuaged with glory: that one may now devour the riches of the past, almost up close and personal, is incredibly satisfying, and takes up much less room in the closets.
These are fabulous designs, truly applied ART.
ReplyDeletei'm so glad you can feel them too, gerrie. there is a textile designer who lives on my street and i was telling her today (4th of july we always have a block party) about my infatuation with this stuff. people who understand, like you and like her, really make such a difference.
ReplyDeleteI stumbled across your blog when I looked up Arthur Wesley Dow books -Composition, Understanding Line, Notan and Color is a special book to me now- everything about his philosophy on art resonates perfectly, as does your amazing blog.
ReplyDeletevioletta-- thank you. for me too, something about dow brings everything right.
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