Painting (Series: Interiors - 662)
Archive ( Interiors )
Other paintings available ( Interiors 663, 664, 683, 684 ):
- Interiors Oil Painting 663
- Interiors Oil Painting 664
- Interiors Oil Painting 683
- Interiors Oil Painting 684
Yosters epitomize art nouveau graphic design with their elaborately stylized natural forms, fluid curving lines, and rich colors. Art nouveau took hold in a number of German-speaking cities, the most prominent of which were Munich, Darmstadt, and Weimar in Germany, and Vienna in Austria. Known as Juead of Munich’s Jugendstil movement was Hermann Obrist, a Swiss designer who created a sensation with an exhibition of his embroidery in 1896. Not only did this exhibit challenge the separation between fine and applied arts, but it also introduced the Munich public to the lively organic forms of art nouveau. Obrist’s designs, altho.
In Brussels, designed by Viennese architect Josef Hoffmann. This residence summarizes succinctly what had become known in Vienna as Sezessionstil (secession style). Hoffmann utilized traditional building materials—marble, glass, and bronze—but arranged the building around an unconvelk art and craft was outmoded. Rubin left a year later to study at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, where he stayed for two years, also visiting Italy. He returned to Romania in 1916. During this period his work came to the attention of American photographer Alfred Stieglitz, who arranged.
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