Art Deco: The Moderne
Although the style of decorative arts of the 1920s is often referred
to as "Art Deco," it was known in that period as "moderne." Moderne
referred to sleek modern styling, abstract patterning, and the use
of the simple, abstract flower that had its origins in Charles Rennie
Mackintosh's designs of the early 20th century. The style was renamed
"Art Deco" in the 1940s by critics who extracted part of the title
of the huge Paris decorative arts exposition of 1925, the Exposition
des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes. Sometimes thought
of as the exposition that brought the moderne style to America,
it actually marked the beginning of the end of the style, as demonstrated
by the textiles found in the Tirocchi shop. Late in the 1920s, two
new approaches replaced it: the Machine Age aesthetic, based on
the shiny metals of machines, and the purist International Style
of the Bauhaus in Germany and French architect le Corbusier.
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