Art Deco: 1910-1939

Art Deco: 1910-1939

by Charlotte Benton (Editor), Ghislaine Woods (Editor), Tim Benton (Editor), Charlotte Benton (Editor)

Synopsis

Art Deco was the style that swept across the globe during the 1920s and 1930s and created the defining look of the interwar years. Its influence was ubiquitous: it touched the design of everything from jazz music to cinemas and Hollywood films to the packaging of cigarettes, from eveningwear and accessories to luxury liners and locomotives. This lavish book brings together nearly 40 leading experts in the field to discuss the phenomenon that was Art Deco - its sources, its varied forms of expression, and the way it refined and redefined itself as it spread throughout the world. With breathtaking illustrations and a text both thought-provoking and scholarly, it will stand as the definitive book on what was, arguably, the most popular style of the twentieth century.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 464
Edition: 1
Publisher: V & A Publications
Published: 05 Sep 2005

ISBN 10: 1851773886
ISBN 13: 9781851773886

Media Reviews
'It is the best book on Art Deco to have appeared so far, and is likely to remain so' Bevis Hillier, The Literary Review 'The book is a triumph of scholarship and loving design and ... is phenomenal value' Tom Rosenthal, The Daily Mail 'A feast for the eyes' Antiques Magazine
Author Bio
Tim Benton is Professor of Art History at the Open University. He has co-curated a number of exhibitions, including Thirties: British Art and Design before the War (1979) and Art and Power (1996). Charlotte Benton is an independent architecture and design historian whose publications include A Different World? Emigre Architects in Britain, 1928-1958 (1995) and Figuration/Abstraction: Public Sculpture in Europe 1945-69 (2003). Ghislaine Wood was curator of the V&A exhibition Art Deco 1910-1939 (2003). She co-curated the major exhibition Art Nouveau 1890-1914 in 2000 and is author of Art Nouveau and the Erotic (V&A 2000) and Essential Art Deco (V&A 2003).