5 Design styles and movements Flashcards

Historical influences

1
Q

What is Art Nouveau (1890-1910)?

A

An international style of decorative art, applied art and architecture inspired by organic shapes and structure, popular in Europe and the United States

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2
Q

Influences (Art Nouveau)

A
  • reaction to the academic art of the 19th century
  • had similar ideals to the Arts and Crafts movement (mourned the loss of hand-crafted skills)
  • designs were more stylised/suitable for mass production
  • Liberty of London: popularised the movement through printed fabric designs, featuring organic flower shapes
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3
Q

Features (Art Nouveau)

A
  • stylised nature: flowers/buds/seedpods/leaves/roots
  • flowing dresses
  • curves
  • ornate nature-inspired designs: vines/insect wings/feathers
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4
Q

Designers/artists (Art Nouveau)

A
  • Liberty: fabric prints
  • Charles Rennie Mackintosh: textiles
  • Margaret MacDonald: embroidery/textiles
  • Alphonse Mucha: posters
  • Aubrey Beardsley: drawings
  • Louis Comfort Tiffany: lighting
  • René Lalique: glassware
  • Gustav Klimt: paintings
  • Antoni Gaudi: architecture
  • Hector Guimard: Paris Metro entrances
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5
Q

What is Art Deco (1920s and 1930s)?

A

An art movement with designs inspired by contemporary modern art, relying on bold designs such as clear, sleek lines, modern geometric shapes/patterns and vibrant colours, reflecting the ‘machine age’ that took hold after WW1 in Europe (Paris)

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6
Q

Influences (Art Deco)

A
  • International Exhibition of modern and Decorative Industrial Arts (Paris, 1925)
  • jazz music
  • modern geometric designs: cars/trains/skyscrapers/automobiles/ocean liners
  • bright colours (Fauvism movement: emphasised the use of colour over representation/values)
  • costumes for Diaghilevs Ballet Russes
  • exotic styles from: China/Japan/Persia/ancient Egypt/India
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7
Q

Features (Art Deco)

A
  • practical styles
  • shorter hem lines
  • the garçonne look: women wearing trousers, less curvy silhouettes, flattening of the chest
  • cloche hats
  • flapper dress: tubular with pleats/gathers/slits at the knees (to allow greater movement)
  • high end fashion featured materials such as: silk/beaded velvet fabrics
  • shorter hairstyles: the bob
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8
Q

Designers/artists (Art Deco)

A
  • Sonia Delauney: textile and costume design
  • Henri Matisse: paintings
  • Romain de Tirtoff (Erté): costume design
  • Frank Lloyd Wright: architecture
  • Clarisse Cliff: ceramics
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9
Q

What is Pop Art (1950s and 1960s)?

A

An art movement inspired by popular culture, including imagery taken from everyday items that emerged in Britain and America in the mid to late 1950s

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10
Q

Influences (Pop Art)

A
  • democratisation of fashion
  • mass-produced fashion: affordable, appealing to the youth market
  • art for a young audience
  • contradicting fine art ideas after WW2
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11
Q

Features (Pop Art)

A
  • bold and bright colours
  • recreating patterns/imagery
  • fabrics: shiny synthetics - wet-look PVC and easy care acrylics/polyester
  • the most referenced art movement in fashion
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12
Q

Designers/artists (Pop Art)

A

Artists:
- Andy Warhol
- Roy Lichtenstein
- Keith Haring
- Yayoi Kusama
- Takashi Murakami

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13
Q

What is Minimalism (1950s-1970s)?

A

An art movement based on stripping everything down to simplicity and essential quality, focusing on gender neutral and functional styles using simple geometric shapes and forms as well as muted colours

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14
Q

Influences (Minimalism)

A
  • antidote to the excess and complexity of ornamentation, colour and pattern
  • reactions against feminism (1950s and 1980s) saw a return of the hyper-feminine look (e.g. Dior’s New Look), which was overturned by experimental designers guided by minimalism
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15
Q

Features (Minimalism)

A
  • monochrome/muted palette
  • subtle and inconspicuous fastenings
  • little ornamentation
  • geometrical/structural shapes and lines
  • focus on: form and fabric
  • strips the design down to its necessary elements
  • use of: new technology and modern materials
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16
Q

Designers/artists (Minimalism)

A

Artists:
- Donald Judd
- John McCracken
- Agnes Martin
Fashion designers:
- Shilpa Shah
- Karla Gallardo
- Diana Zwetzich
- Halston
- Calvin Klein
- Helmut Lang
- Courrèges

17
Q

What is Punk (mid-1970s onwards)?

A

A movement that was androgynous and deliberately offensive in appearance, that focused on political, seditionist, defiantly anti-materialistic and anti-establishment views and imagery

18
Q

Influences (Punk)

A
  • punk rock music: popular with demoralised/unemployed youngsters
  • punk musicians: anti-establishment in lyrics and appearance
  • UK 1970s punk fashion: Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren
  • punk clothing: initially handmade, but became mass-produced by the 1980s and sold in record stores/smaller specialty clothing stores
19
Q

Features (Punk)

A
  • black (prime fashion colour)
  • dress shirts
  • leather jackets
  • customised blazers
  • leopard pattern trousers
  • tight leather pants
  • tapered jeans
  • bondage pants
  • garments were covered in controversial images/patches/’blood’/slogans
  • deliberately ugly
  • deliberately offensive t-shirts (slogans/imagery), that were torn on purpose
  • distressed on purpose (torn/ripped)
20
Q

Designers/artists (Punk)

A

Fashion designers:
- Vivienne Westwood
- Anna Sui
- Jean Paul Gaultier
- Zandra Rhodes
- Kawabuko
- Charles Jeffrey