Book Information:

TitleParis-New York
SubtitleDesign Fashion Culture 1925-1940
AuthorAlbrecht, Donald;
PublisherMuseum of the City of New York
Publish Date2011
ISBN9781580932110
Pages240
BindingHardcover
Notes

A burst of creative energy in the fields of architecture, design, and fashion characterized the years between the two World Wars. Shaping new styles of buildings and furnishings, redefining contemporary dress, and giving visual form to avant-garde performing arts, architects and designers forged a still-influential modern aesthetic. The era's most creative figures rarely worked in isolation, preferring instead to participate in international dialogues that crossed national boundaries and linked capital cities in collaborative artistic enterprise.No two cities engaged in a more fertile conversation than Paris and New York. The interchange between them was never simple, however, comprising in equal measure admiration and envy, respect and rivalry, as artists and designers in each city interpreted and incorporated principles of Art Deco, Cubism, the International Style, Neo-Romanticism, and Surrealism into their own practices.

URLhttps://books.google.com/books?id=-iJEAQAAIAAJ&q=9781580932110&dq=9781580932110&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjmxKnk7IzYAhXOZiYKHZXbA6UQ6AEIFDAA
TRRF Call No.DE-00148
TitleParis-New York
SubtitleDesign Fashion Culture 1925-1940
AuthorAlbrecht, Donald;
PublisherMuseum of the City of New York
Publish Date2011
ISBN9781580932110
Pages240
BindingHardcover
Notes

A burst of creative energy in the fields of architecture, design, and fashion characterized the years between the two World Wars. Shaping new styles of buildings and furnishings, redefining contemporary dress, and giving visual form to avant-garde performing arts, architects and designers forged a still-influential modern aesthetic. The era's most creative figures rarely worked in isolation, preferring instead to participate in international dialogues that crossed national boundaries and linked capital cities in collaborative artistic enterprise.No two cities engaged in a more fertile conversation than Paris and New York. The interchange between them was never simple, however, comprising in equal measure admiration and envy, respect and rivalry, as artists and designers in each city interpreted and incorporated principles of Art Deco, Cubism, the International Style, Neo-Romanticism, and Surrealism into their own practices.

URLhttps://lccn.loc.gov/2008004091
TRRF Call No.DE-00148

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