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Design Movements

A Brief History of Design. Design Movements. Arts & Crafts Movement 1851 - 1914.

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Design Movements

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  1. A Brief History of Design Design Movements

  2. Arts & Crafts Movement 1851 - 1914 aimed to promote a return to hand-craftsmanship and to assert the creative independence of individual craftspeople. It was a reaction against the industrialised society that had boomed in Britain in the Victorian period, and aimed for social as well as artistic reform.

  3. Charles Rennie Mackintosh - Ladies Luncheon Room

  4. Aesthetic Movement 1870 - 1900 is a loosely defined movement in literature, fine art, furniture, metalwork, ceramics, stained glass, textiles, and wallpapers in later nineteenth-century Britain. The Aesthetic Movement argued that art was not supposed to be utilitarian or useful in any practical sense. Instead, aesthetic experience is a fully autonomous and independent aspect of a human life. Thus, art should exist solely for its own sake.

  5. Aesthetic movement furniture is characterised by several common themes: • Ebonised wood with gilt highlights • Japanese influence • Prominent use of nature, especially flowers, birds, ginko leaves, and peacock feathers. • Blue and white on porcelain and china. Louis Comfort Tiffany Lamp

  6. Art Nouveau 1880 – 1905 was a concerted attempt to create an international style based on decoration. It is characterized by organic, especially floral and other plant-inspired motifs, as well as highly-stylized, flowing curvilinear forms Arthur Heygate Mackmurdo, Chair, 1882

  7. Jugendstil 1880 - 1910 The German Art Nouveau – it encouraged functional, linear ornamentation modelled on the Pre-Raphaelite movement in England and on Japanese art. Atelier Elvira, designed by Jugendstil architect August Endell

  8. Deutscher Werkbund 1907 - 1935 was founded in 1907 to advance the quality of Industrial Design, and it is from this foundation that the later Bauhaus style developed - which is probably the most important school in the history of object design.

  9. Futurism 1909 - 1930 Umberto Boccioni Unique Forms of Continuity in Space (1913) An Example of Futurist Architecture, by Antonio Sant’ella

  10. Constructivism 1917 - 1935 Malevich teapot and cups

  11. De Stijl 1917- 1928 Dutch for ‘The Style’ – sought to express a new utopian ideal of spiritual harmony and order. They advocated pure abstract form and universality by a reduction of the essentials of form and colour; they simplified visual compositions to the vertical and horizontal directions, and used only the primary colours along with black and white. Piet Mondrian, Composition in Red, Blue and Yellow, 1930 Red Blue Chair Gerrit Rietveld

  12. Bauhaus 1920 - 1930 From 1919 to 1933, this profoundly influential German school of art & architecture existed in Weimar, Dessau & Berlin under the leadership of Walter Gropius, Hannes Meyer, and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe - & later for a year in Chicago as New Bauhaus under László Moholy-Nagy. (via wikipedia) The influence of the Bauhaus is still felt on art, arthitecture, graphic design, interior design, industrial design and typography. This fun Walter Gropius chair looks as modern today as the day it was designed, and shows why, when expertly executed, graphic combinations never go out of fashion. Wassily chair by Bruer

  13. International 1920 - 1980

  14. Art Deco 1920 - 1939 Kem Weber, German, Zephyr, electric clock. Brass and Bakelite, American, c.1934.

  15. Organic and Biomorphism 1930 - 1960

  16. Streamlining 1930 - 1960

  17. Pop 1958 – 1972

  18. Radical Design & Anti-Design 1968 - 1978 Design: Archizoom AssociatiColour: Black / LeopardYear: 1968 Superstudio: Istogrammi (detail) 1969-2000

  19. Eco Design 1970 - Present

  20. Postmodernism 1978 - present

  21. Memphis 1981 - 1988

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