Art Deco, also called style moderne, movement in the decorative arts and architecture that originated in the 1920s and developed into a major style in western Europe and the United States during the 1930s. Its name was derived from the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes, held in Paris in 1925, where the style was first exhibited. Art Deco design represented modernism turned into fashion. Its products included both individually crafted luxury items and mass-produced wares, but, in either case, the intention was to create a sleek and anti-traditional elegance that symbolized wealth and sophistication.
The distinguishing features of the style are simple, clean shapes, often with a “streamlined” look; ornament that is geometric or stylized from representational forms; and unusually varied, often expensive materials, which frequently include man-made substances (plastics, especially Bakelite; vita-glass; and ferroconcrete) in addition to natural ones (jade, silver, ivory, obsidian, chrome, and rock crystal). Though Art Deco objects were rarely mass-produced, the characteristic features of the style reflected admiration for the modernity of the machine and for the inherent design qualities of machine-made objects (e.g., relative simplicity, planarity, symmetry, and
Among the formative influences on Art Deco were Art Nouveau, the Bauhaus, Cubism, and Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes. Decorative ideas came from American Indian, Egyptian, and early classical sources as well as from nature. Characteristic motifs included nude female figures, animals, foliage, and sun rays, all in conventionalized forms.
Most of the outstanding Art Deco creators designed individually crafted or limited-edition items. They included the furniture designers Jacques Ruhlmann and Maurice Dufrène; the architect Eliel Saarinen; metalsmith Jean Puiforcat; glass and jewelry designer René Lalique; fashion designer Erté; artist-jewelers Raymond Templier, H.G. Murphy, and Wiwen Nilsson; and the figural sculptor Chiparus. The fashion designer Paul Poiret and the graphic artist Edward McKnight Kauffer represent those whose work directly reached a larger audience. New York City’s Rockefeller Center (especially its interiors supervised by Donald Deskey; built between 1929 and 1940), the Chrysler Building by William Van Alen, and the Empire State Building by Shreve, Lamb & Harmon are the most monumental embodiments of Art Deco. During the 1930s the style took over South Beach in Miami, Florida, producing an area known as the Art Deco historic district.
Although the style went out of fashion in most places during World War II, beginning in the late 1960s there was a renewed interest in Art Deco design. Into the 21st century Art Deco continued to be a source of inspiration in such areas as decorative art, fashion, and jewelry design.
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Cover of the Jester of Columbia, unattributed, 1931 |
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Chicago world's fair, a century of progress, Expo poster, 1933 |
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Bust for a shop window, 1920
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The Artesian fountain - Decorative ironwork of the Madison Belmont Building, 1925 New York City |
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Victoire by Rene Lalique, 1928 Toyota Automobile Museum |
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Seamless vintage wallpaper pattern |
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Christ the Redeemer by Paul Landowski, 1931 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
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The gilded bronze Prometheus at Rockefeller Center, 1934 New York City, N.Y. |
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Atlas statue, in front of the Rockefeller Center, installed in 1937 |
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Ralph Stackpole's sculpture group over the door of the San Francisco Stock Exchange, 1930 San Francisco, California |
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The Statue of Hygieia in Art Deco style, 1932 Cracow, Poland |
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Beloved by Erte
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Polish coat of arms (unofficial) 1934 on the facade of the post office in Warsaw, Julian Puterman-Sadłowski, architect |
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Lobby, Empire State Building, 1931 New York City. William F. Lamb |
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Jacques émile ruhlmann, poltrona oreille cassée, 1914 |
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Dressing table and chair of marble and encrusted, lacquered, and gilded wood 1919–20 by Follot |
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Desk of an administrator, by Michel Roux-Spitz, 1930 |
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Table mirror by Franz Hagenauer of Werkstätte Hagenauer Wien, 1930 |
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Philips Art Deco radio set, 1931 |
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Cocktail set of chrome-plated steel by Norman Bel Geddes, 1937 |
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Electrolux Vacuum cleaner, 1937 |
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Art Deco buckle, 1925 |
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Cord automobile model 812, 1937
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Phantom Corsair Pebble Beach, Concours d'Elegance, 1938
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