European Peasant Art: True Simplicity
Modernist artists who found the essence of humanity in the exotic
looked to European "peasant" art for the same truth. Like many other
artists and designers, couturier Paul Poiret had traveled in Germany
and Austria by 1910. There, artists like Gustav Klimt and Josef
Hoffmann were producing modernist architecture, painting, and decorative
art, including textiles and fashion designs, using the bright colors
of "peasant" art in their work. It was just at this moment, in 1909,
that the Ballets Russes came to Paris from Russia for the first
time, startling audiences with their exotic costumes and set designs
based on brilliantly colored Russian "peasant" art. Instantly embraced
by the French public, these "orientalist" designs influenced art
and fashion throughout the 1910s and into the 20s, an example of
the internationalism that was an important part of early modernism.
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