Art Noveau
Art Noveau
Art Noveau
(FURNITURE STYLES)
Aonuevo. Pajel. Reodica. Reyes 2 - Architecture
CHARACTERISTICS
EXAMPLES
BACKGROUND
Art Nouveau comes from French and it means New Art. Began in London, Europe in the 1890s. Also Known as JUGENSTIL(Germany), STILE LIBERTY(Italy),
BACKGROUND
Influenced by the Arts and Crafts Movement in England and the US and by the Symbolist Movement in France A decorative-art movement centered in Western Europe. It began in the
BACKGROUND
Art Nouveau was a continuation of the older arts and crafts movement of the
British designer, William Morris. Art Nouveau was based upon a dream born of the horrified reaction of William Morris to the shabby manufactured goods, festooned in bad taste and marred by poor craft that he saw at the Great Exposition of 1851 in London Art Nouveau was based upon the idea of the Total Work of Art, the gesamtkunstwerk, which engulfed all of the spectators senses. Art Nouveau was a total immersion of life in style. All of existence was to be aestheticized.
BACKGROUND
Art Nouveau was part of a more complex phenomenon that had been unfolding in Europe for a long time. Art Nouveau sought to restore the importance of the decorative arts.
BACKGROUND
Art Nouveau exploded onto the design scene in Paris and London at the turn of the twentieth century. It was the first original style, that took inspiration from its surroundings, not
history.
Nature, which had ruled over art for the first half of the nineteenth century, would continue as a source of inspiration, with the one big difference that the new aesthetic required more than just a faithful depiction of plant forms. Instead Nature would be restyled and transcended and finally abstracted.
BACKGROUND
Confronted by the aesthetic bankruptcy of mechanization and the necessity for creating a new style, the Art Nouveau artists made an attempt to return to craft conditions, to revive handicraft. Like the Arts and Crafts movement, it was the style
of the individual designer, who relied on the work of men's hands, not on machines.
The Goal of the Movement was to raise craft to the level of fine art. Turning our artists into craftsmen and our craftsmen into artists. (Walter Crane) Its proponents held that art and life were one and the same.
BACKGROUND
Contributors:
Gothic contributed theory; Baroque its plastic conception of form Rococo its principle of asymmetry. They were scarcely aware of the nature of materials. Wood was twisted into strange shapes and metal writhed in tortuous curves inspired by the flowing interlacings of Nature, for the style as a whole is based on Nature, not only its decoration but also its structural conception. An awareness of this fact is necessary to the understanding of the new art, as it was in Art Nouveau that Nature as an aesthetic expression reached its highest point.
BACKGROUND
The last antique furniture style The Turin Exhibition of 1902 marked the decisive point as well as the crossroads of the style. It was evident to everyone that it was already declining. Although a number of artists continued to use it up to the outbreak of the First World War, the main artistic development after 1902 tended toward simplicity, more emphasis on structural function and less on ornamentation. The real underlying reason for the abrupt rejection, was the rumblings of a new movement; the Modern.
CHARACTERISTICS
Distinctive style, not unique to any one type of art, that would help unify chaotic industrial life. Organic Forms and Curvilinear lines Rich Floral Patterns; Stylized flowers, leaves, roots, buds and seed pods Exotic woods, marquetry, iridescent glass, silver and semi-precious stones
CHARACTERISTICS
Arabesques (Mostly in Posters)- are repetitive and are often geometric patterns Parabolas/ Hyperbolas The style was richly ornamental and asymmetrical, characterized by a whiplash linearity reminiscent of twining plant tendrils. Its exponents chose themes fraught with symbolism, frequently of an erotic nature and imbued their designs with dreamlike and exotic form.
FURNITURE STYLE
The Art Nouveau style is a naturalistic style characterized by intricately detailed patterns and curving lines. APPLICATION: Bringing art into everyday life Emphasis on craftsmanship brought over
FURNITURE STYLE
FURNITURE STYLE
FURNITURE STYLE
Chair Back Shape
Balloon - Balloonshaped chair back, rounded at the top and tapering to the seat.
FURNITURE STYLE
FURNITURE STYLE
FURNITURE STYLE
FURNITURE STYLE
FURNITURE STYLE
FURNITURE STYLE
FURNITURE STYLE
Drawer Pull
Rectangular Plate with Bail Rectangular back plate of solid stamped brass, often with canted corners and an oval bail handle. The size varies from 3 to 4 inches wide to 2 to 2.5 inches high.
FURNITURE STYLE
Fabric
Brocade - Rich, heavily woven fabric with a raised design, often with gold or silver thread.
FURNITURE STYLE
Fabric
Damask - Medium weight, glossy fabric with a reversible pattern and a figured intricate weave, often of linen, cotton, silk, or wool.
FURNITURE STYLE
Fabric
Leather - Material made from the tanning of animal hides.
FURNITURE STYLE
Fabric
Linen - Fabric made from the fiber of the flax plant.
FURNITURE STYLE
Fabric
Mohair - Fabric made from the angora goat.
FURNITURE STYLE
Fabric
Tapestry - Heavy weight fabric with decorative designs.
FURNITURE STYLE
Fabric
Velvet - Woven pile fabric that is soft and sturdy, often made of silk with blends of cotton, nylon, and rayon.
FURNITURE STYLE
Finish
Lacquer - Tough, adherent finish which can be clear or pigmented.
FURNITURE STYLE
Finish
Oil Varnish - Clear finish that emphasized the grain of the wood.
FURNITURE STYLE
Finish
Paint - Opaque, pigmented finish that obscures the grain of the wood.
FURNITURE STYLE
Foot
Continuation of leg Leg does not terminate into a foot.
FURNITURE STYLE
Joint
Dovetail - An interlocking wood joint in which a series of wedgeshaped projections fits into a series of alternating grooves.
FURNITURE STYLE
Line
Cyma or S-Curve - Sshaped curve, partly concave and partly convex.
FURNITURE STYLE
Line
Slight Curve - Gently curving lines.
FURNITURE STYLE
Motif
Floral - Flowers.
FURNITURE STYLE
Motif
Foliage - Leaves or vines.
FURNITURE STYLE
Motif
Tulip - Cup-shaped flower.
FURNITURE STYLE
Ornamentation
Carving - Cutting or chipping the surface of wood to create a shape or design.
FURNITURE STYLE
Ornamentation
Inlay - Contrasting material set into the surface of wood to create a shape or design.
FURNITURE STYLE
Ornamentation
Marquetry Combinations of veneer used to create pictures or patterns.
FURNITURE STYLE
Proportion
Medium - Moderate dimensions.
FURNITURE STYLE
Underbracing
Moderate Moderately proportioned stretchers.
FURNITURE STYLE
Wood
Beech - Light brown American hardwood with a flecked grain.
FURNITURE STYLE
Wood
Black Walnut - Dark brown American hardwood with a wide range of figures.
FURNITURE STYLE
Wood
Mahogany - Redbrown South American and African hardwood.
FURNITURE STYLE
Wood
Oak - Gray-brown American hardwood.
EXAMPLES
Art Nouveau Moth Bed
EXAMPLES
Camille Gauthier CARD TABLE. later spuriously signed Gall mahogany, walnut and fruitwood marquetry. 1900
EXAMPLES
A SHAPLAND & PETTER ART NOUVEAU INLAID MAHOGANY DISPLAY CABINET CIRCA 1900. The central cupboard with glazed door embellished with open metalwork foliage, flanked by pireced, mirrored and galleried shelves above cupboards with elaborate inlaid panels of coloured woods and mother-of-pearl, on tapering supports united by stretchers
EXAMPLES
A Continental Art Nouveau inlaid marquetry, walnut and bevelled glass display cabinet circa 1900.
EXAMPLES
Fire screen with marquetry of various woods. Emile Gall (1846-1904).
EXAMPLES
Louis Majorelle (18591926) - "Aux Nnuphars" (The Lillies) Double Bed and Pair of Bedside Tables. Carved Amaranth Wood with Gilt Bronze Hardware and Moldings. Circa 1905.
EXAMPLES
Art Nouveau Desk by Eugene Vallin.
EXAMPLES
Louis Majorelle, about 1900
EXAMPLES
Emile Gall (1846-1904), Nancy, Mahogany and Bronze Server with Fruit Wood Inlays.
EXAMPLES
Nowak, Mahogany and Gilt Bronze Table.
EXAMPLES
Art Nouveau Ladies Writing Desk. Mahogany with Marquetry Inlays and Leather Writing Surface. European. Circa 1900.
EXAMPLES
Chambre art nouveau (Muse d'Orsay) Lit, modle cr en 1899 par Gustave SerrurierBovy (1858-1910)
EXAMPLES
Art Nouveau Chair by Jan Kotera, 1902. Museum of Decorative Arts, Prague.
EXAMPLES
Louis Majorelle (French, 18591926), Nancy, Encoignure, Mahogany, Fruit Wood Inlays and Glass, 1900.
EXAMPLES
Louis Marjorelle (1859-1926) - Side Chair. Carved Mahogany and Gilt Bronze Aux Nnuphars (Lillies), with Cane Seat. Circa 1905.
EXAMPLES
Art Nouveau Style Furniture Charles Rennie Mckintosh.
EXAMPLES
Henri-JulesFerdinand BelleryDesfontaines: Armchair (1990.213) | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
EXAMPLES
Emile-Galle
EXAMPLES
4-Henryvander Velde1897
EXAMPLES
Armchair with slender plant-frond frame and Art Nouveau upholstery by Louis Majorelle (1899-1900).
EXAMPLES
Guimard, Hector (artist) Cabinet from Castel Branger 20th century, 1899
EXAMPLES
Art Nouveau oval vanity with an interesting arrangement of drawers inside and marquetry doors.
EXAMPLES
Jozef Hoffmann (1870-1956)
EXAMPLES
Art Nouveau Furniture by Juan Busquets (1874-1949)
EXAMPLES
Art Nouveau cabinet
EXAMPLES
Art Nouveau furniture design by Louis Majorelle (1859 1926).
EXAMPLES
Antonio Gaudi (1852-1926) & Aleix Claps (1850-1920) Vitrine. Carved & Gilt Wood and Glass. Designed for the Casa Ibarz. Barcelona, Spain.
EXAMPLES
French 19th Century Carved Art Nouveau Settee
EXAMPLES
The Battlo Bench designed by Antoni Gaudi
EXAMPLES
Gustave Serrurier-Bovy Red narra and ash with copper and enamel mounts
FIN