Painting (Series: Still_Life_Fruit_Food - 733)
Archive ( Still_Life_Fruit_Food )
Other paintings available ( Still_Life_Fruit_Food 734, 735, 744, 745 ):
- Still_Life_Fruit_Food Oil Painting 734
- Still_Life_Fruit_Food Oil Painting 735
- Still_Life_Fruit_Food Oil Painting 744
- Still_Life_Fruit_Food Oil Painting 745
Qile floreale (floral style) or stile Liberty, after British art nouveau designer Arthur Lasenby Liberty; in Spain as modernisme; in Austria as Sezessionstil (secession style); and in Germany as Jugendstil (youth style). These diverse names reflect the widespread adoption of the movement, which had centers in major cities all over Europe—Paris and Nancy in France; Darmstadt andadded new forms and materials, establishing the aesthetic of the art nouveau style. One of the earliest examples of art nouveau in England is a chair designed in 1882 by British architect Arthur Mackmurdo, which exhibits the curving lines associated with the style. Likewise, the fabric designs of Arthur Lasenby Liberty, who opened a shop called Liberty & Co. in 1875, also illustrate an interest in organic forms and curving, decora.
Xtish designer Charles Ashbee established a workshop and school for artisans in London. Ashbee’s furniture and metalwork designs reflect the more rectilinear (straight-lined or right-angled) version of art nouveau style. In the graphic arts, Aubrey Beardsley drew illustrations for periodicals such as The Yellow Book (1894-1895), and for an edition of the play Salome (1894) by Irish-born writer Oscar Wildeof the brick and stone exterior clearly indicate the division of space within the building, while large expanses of glass provide a strong visual connection between the interior spaces and the outside world. Window mullions (dividers between panes of glass), doors, and fences use ironwork in an elegant linear or geometric manner. Th.
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