Art Auctions: Art Deco
In the field of modern art, art deco plays a large and
impressively lavish role. The strong colors and sweeping curves
lend art deco the trademark boldness that expressed much of the
progress and modern advances of the twentieth century. Art
auctions around the world still move many art deco pieces of
various kinds. If you're interested in collecting art deco,
there are many art auctions both online and off that deal
primarily in art deco.
In the twentieth century the decorative arts converged in
what is known as the art deco movement, which grew to influence
architecture, fashion, the visual arts as well as design. The
term 'art deco' was derived from a World's Fair held in Paris,
France, called the Exposition Internationale des Arts
Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes in the year 1925.
Though the movement and term comes from the Exposition
Internationale des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes, the
term was not widely used until the late 1960s. Especially pre-
World War I Europe influenced the art deco movement, though
many cultures influenced and were influenced by this art
movement. Much of the world was experiencing similar shifts in
modern technological advances.
For the most part, the art deco movement was brought about
and inspired by the rapid advances of technological and social
facets of the early twentieth century. As culture responded to
these increasingly changing times, the art deco movement was an
outgrowth of these modern phenomena.
Art deco is considered generally to be an eclectic type of
decorative modernism that was influenced by a variety of
artists and particular art forms. Art deco includes furniture,
metalwork, clocks, glasswork and screens as well as paintings
and other fine art types of pieces.
The art deco style is known for its lavishness and epicurean
flairs that are attributed to the austerity of culture brought
about by World War I. Strong patterns and bold colors and
shapes were used, as were many particular motifs used
universally.
For example, the sunburst motif was used in everything from
the Radio City Music Hall auditorium, images of ladies' shoes,
the spire of the Chrysler Building and several other pieces of
art, architecture and design. Other ubiquitous motifs found in
art deco were stepped forms, the zigzag, chevron patterns and
sweeping curves.
In the West, art deco lost its steam around the Second World
War, but continued to be used all the way into the 1960s in
colonial countries such as India, where it served as a gateway
to Modernism. Then in the 1980s art deco made a comeback in
graphic design. Art deco's association with 1930s film noir led
to its use in both fashion and jewelry ads.
Today art deco is revered by many and dismissed as old news
and overly gaudy by others. Though it undoubtedly played a
major role in art history, as with most art, individual taste
frames the individual's interpretation and like or dislike of
art deco styles.
Art deco is one of the most well known art movements. This
is mostly due to its wide base of influences and influenced art
forms and cultures. Since much of the world was experiencing
many of the same advances in technology and mass production,
many of the same ideas and symbols were relevant in various
parts of the world.
|