What a wonderful way of explaining Art Deco, I guess it was an overlap between the contrasting Art Nouveau (that sadly had no hope because machines and low costs can never be competed with) and Art moderne or Streamline as shown at the end of the video that developed from Bauhaus if I'm not wrong? It's so sad that as time moved on we've totally lost value in Ornamentation. As William Morris said (and many other designers/artists added with their own plausible theories how design stimulates the brain and feels "healthier") Ornamentation brings value to 2 groups of people - the maker as he's crafting it, and the user. Think about the difference of holding a smooth fork when you eat and one with ornamentation. We need real design back.... and get as far away from AI as possible
Anything and everything could be beautiful in Art Deco, from the simplest appliance to massive machinery and architecture.
really good talk. As someone who has seen multiple talks about Art Deco, I still learned some things :D
Thank you. We thrive on praise!
Very informative. Thank you!
Thank you! Your research is perfect and your information easy to understand.
Good to hear - thank you.
What a great video!! I love Art Déco, and you make learning about it enjoyable and useful!!
This is great!
👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Thanks you so much. I am learning. Is there a version of Art Deco in each state of USA ?
You are welcome. Perhaps you will find what you need here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_Deco_in_the_United_States
What a wonderful way of explaining Art Deco, I guess it was an overlap between the contrasting Art Nouveau (that sadly had no hope because machines and low costs can never be competed with) and Art moderne or Streamline as shown at the end of the video that developed from Bauhaus if I'm not wrong? It's so sad that as time moved on we've totally lost value in Ornamentation. As William Morris said (and many other designers/artists added with their own plausible theories how design stimulates the brain and feels "healthier") Ornamentation brings value to 2 groups of people - the maker as he's crafting it, and the user. Think about the difference of holding a smooth fork when you eat and one with ornamentation. We need real design back.... and get as far away from AI as possible
Please remember me the name of this excellent Professor.
Richard Stone
Have a splendid week!