www.bbc.co.uk/homes/design/period_artnouveau.shtml
www.pixel77.com/the-influence-of-art-history-on-modern-design-art-nouveau/
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
www.popphoto.com
www.textilearts.net
www.vogue.co.uk
www.pintrest.com
www.moma.org
www.newbritishartists.co.uk
www.royalacademy.org.uk
Sunday, 14 June 2015
Research
The research found in the pack can be used for inspiration and idea generating. The clear links between Art Nouveau and Wildwood are shown through nature, natural form and colour, from the pack you can make a clear link and interpretation between old and modern Art Nouveau, and the pages on Modern Art Nouveau link to some of the tasks in the Wildwood theme; like typography. The artists researched are from different eras and show a diverse range of Art Nouveau styles.
Modern Art Nouveau
The nymph and floral oranaments are some of the most influential art nouveau elements used by graphic designers in their artworks. Some of the most beautiful print arts represent nymphs with floral elements, art nouveau specific colors like olive green, ochre, sinuous lines and art nouveau typography.
The Art Nouveau style can still be found in some of todays’ most luxurious homes. The home designs decorated in Art Nouveau style are characterized by the use of various prints and ornamental shapes. These are used in decorating the walls or in tapestry, in the textiles or even in the art artifacts or wall watches.
The accessories in an art nouveau home are represented by large mirrors with bronze frames or sculpted wood, painted jewelery cases, vases and porcelains.
Modern Art Nouveau
The Art Nouveau movement had a great influence on illustrators, artists and the printing trade in America including Art Nouveau revivial in the post-war 60s hippie movement. Even today, some of the best features of Art Nouveau can be seen throughout the visual communication industry – like the painting of Marilyn Monroe for “Visages De Renom” by New York illustrator Les Katz or the works of Milton Glaser and his Push-Pin studio.
The Art Nouveau has been reevaluated in the last twenty years with the rise of postmodernism design. Artists all over the world are using as inspiration today elements of this modern art style like the sinuous lines, floral elements, the nature features and the characteristic colours.
Marlboro
William Morris
Linda Ravencroft
Linda Ravenscroft was born in Cheshire, England in 1963. She is a self-taught artist and author best known for her paintings and drawings of fantasy subjects. Her work is influenced by William Morris and his contemporaries, as well by more modern illustrators such as Brian Froud. Ravenscroft became a professional artist in 1994 and her first prints were published in 1998; since then, she has been featured in many Fantasy/Fairy Art books and illustrated and written several tutorial Faerie Art books, such as How to Draw and Paint Fairies. Ravenscroft's work has been widely featured on cards and calendars. In 2013, Linda opened up a gallery, named "The Mystic Garden".
Timeline
England
Morris & Co. established, promoting arts and crafts movement. | 1875 | |
1879 |
Thomas Edison demonstrates the electric light.
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1883 |
Construction begins on ten-story Home Insurance Building in Chicago, the first to use skyscraper engineering.
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Brussels
Term "art nouveau" appears in print for the first time, describing the Belgian artists' group "Les XX." | 1884 |
The first subway system opens in London.
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1885 |
Gottlieb Daimler and Karl Benz invent the first automobile run by an internal combustion engine.
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1889 |
The Eiffel Tower is built for the Paris World's Fair.
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New York
Tiffany Glass and Decorating Company established. | 1892 | |
Great Britain
Aubrey Beardsley design published in the first issue of the magazine The Studio. Paris Japanese prints exhibition organized by Siegfried Bing. Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec paints Jane Avril at the Jardin de Paris. Brussels Victor Horta designs the Tassel House. Chicago Columbian World's Fair; Adler and Sullivan design the Transportation Building. | 1893 |
Women win the right to vote in New Zealand, the first country to embrace female suffrage. In Belgium universal male suffrage is adopted.
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Paris
Hector Guimard designs Castel Béranger. | 1894 |
Claude Debussy completes L'après-midi d'une faune.
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Paris
Siegfried Bing opens his gallery/shop L'Art Nouveau. Louis Comfort Tiffany exhibits at Bing's opening of L'Art Nouveau. | 1895 |
The Lumière brothers screen the first moving picture--of workers leaving a factory.
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Glasgow
Charles Rennie Mackintosh and George Walton design Buchanan Street tearooms. Brussels World's Fair: Henry van de Velde and Victor Horta show designs. | 1897 | |
Munich
United Workshops for Art in Handicraft founded. Vienna Josef Olbrich designs Secession Building. Gustav Klimt paints Pallas Athene. Turin Exhibition of Italian decorative arts. | 1898 |
European and American troops are sent to quell the Boxer Rebellion in China.
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London
South Kensington Museum becomes Victoria and Albert Museum. Paris Hector Guimard designs Castel Henriette. René Lalique designs Dragonfly woman corsage ornament. | 1899 |
Thorstein Veblen, The Theory of the Leisure Class, published.
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London
Charles Robert Ashbee and Charles Rennie Mackintosh exhibit to great acclaim at Eighth Secession Exhibition, Vienna. Paris Loïe Fuller Pavilion, Pavilion Bing, and other Art Nouveau designs triumph at the World's Fair. Paris metro opens using Hector Guimard's Metro station entrances. | 1900 |
Sigmund Freud, The Interpretation of Dreams, published.
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Nancy
Émile Gallé made first president of École de Nancy. | 1901 |
Queen Victoria dies after sixty-three-year reign that saw vast expansion of British colonial rule.
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1903 |
Americans Wilbur and Orville Wright make the first manned flight at Kitty Hawk.
Pierre and Marie Curie share Nobel Prize for discovery of radium. | |
1905 |
Albert Einstein develops the special theory of relativity.
Exhibition at Salon d'automne by artists dubbed "les fauves." | |
Barcelona
Antoní Gaudí designs Casa Milá. | 1906 | |
Chicago
Frank Lloyd Wright designs Robie House. | 1907 | |
Glasgow
Completion of Glasgow School of Art. | 1909 | |
Venice
Venice Biennale includes Gustav Klimt. | 1910 |
Overview
1880-1910
Art Nouveau is said to be the first modern style in the 20th century. It was the first style to stop being inspired by things of the past, but yet instead taking inspiration from around you and in particular nature.
Art Nouveau is said to be the first modern style in the 20th century. It was the first style to stop being inspired by things of the past, but yet instead taking inspiration from around you and in particular nature.
When Art Nouveau was first shown in Paris and then in London, there was outrage; it was like marmite, either people loved it or hated it. Within the style itself there are two distinct looks: curvy lines and the more austere, linear look. Some aspects of art nouveau were revived again in the 1960s.
This style was spread pretty fast throughout Europe thanks to photo-illustrated art magazines and international exhibitions. Its name differed according to each country, so it was called “Modernisme” in Catalonia, “Liberty” in Italy, “Jugendstil” in Germany, “Secession” in Vienna or Prague.
This style was spread pretty fast throughout Europe thanks to photo-illustrated art magazines and international exhibitions. Its name differed according to each country, so it was called “Modernisme” in Catalonia, “Liberty” in Italy, “Jugendstil” in Germany, “Secession” in Vienna or Prague.
This modern style was considered an attempt to create an international style based on decorations. Art Nouveau was a style developed by an energetic and brilliant generation of designers and artists who sought to fashion an art form appropriate to the modern age.
In many ways, this style was a response to the Industrial Revolution. The technological progress was welcomed by artists who embraced the aesthetic possibilities of using new materials in their art work such as cast iron.
Influences
- arts and crafts - art nouveau shared the same belief in quality goods and fine craftsmanship but was happy with mass production
- rococo style
- botanical research
Style
- sinuous, elongated, curvy lines
- the whiplash line
- vertical lines and height
- stylised flowers, leaves, roots, buds and seedpods
- the female form - in a pre-Raphaelite pose with long, flowing hair
- exotic woods, marquetry, iridescent glass, silver and semi-precious stones
Big Art Nouveau Names
- Charles Rennie Mackintosh - architect and designer of furniture and jewellery
- Alphonse Mucha - posters
- Aubrey Beardsley - book illustrations
- Louis Comfort Tiffany - lighting
- René Lalique - glass and jewellery
- Emile Galle - ceramics, glass and furniture
- Victor Horta - architect
Art Nouveau links to the specific theme and question I am providing for, as both derive from nature.
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