>>Art Nouveau <<
Art Nouveau, 1890-1914, explores a new style in the visual arts and
architecture that developed in Europe and North America at the end of
the nineteenth century. The exhibition is divided into three sections:
the first focuses on the 1900 World's Fair in Paris, where Art Nouveau
was established as the first new decorative style of the twentieth century;
the second examines the sources that influenced the style; and the third
looks at its development and fruition in major cities in Europe and North
America.
At its height exactly one hundred years ago, Art Nouveau was a concerted
attempt to create an international style based on decoration. It was developed
by a brilliant and energetic generation of artists and designers, who
sought to fashion an art form appropriate to the modern age. During this
extraordinary time, urban life as we now understand it was established.
Old customs, habits, and artistic styles sat alongside new, combining
a wide range of contradictory images and ideas. Many artists, designers,
and architects were excited by new technologies and lifestyles, while
others retreated into the past, embracing the spirit world, fantasy, and
myth.
Art Nouveau was in many ways a response to the Industrial Revolution.
Some artists welcomed technological progress and embraced the aesthetic
possibilities of new materials such as cast iron. Others deplored the
shoddiness of mass-produced machine-made goods and aimed to elevate the
decorative arts to the level of fine art by applying the highest standards
of craftsmanship and design to everyday objects. Art Nouveau designers
also believed that all the arts should work in harmony to create a "total
work of art," or Gesamtkunstwerk: buildings, furniture, textiles,
clothes, and jewelry all conformed to the principles of Art Nouveau.



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