A typical floral Art Nouveau doorway |
But I'm also beginning to realize that in all my striving to refer to my favorite style as l'art nouveau, it was coming out a little, well, "pretentious" seems to be the only word that comes to mind.
So "Art Nouveau" it will be from now on!
An Interior Entrance from a Building Foyer (with exquisite tracery connecting the wooden trim and the glass) |
The photos are my own (not very professional - sorry about that) and I guess it's pretty obvious that I didn't go for the more famous sites and objects. I did, though, have fun with trying to figure out just what it was - back at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th - that inspired people to latch on to Art Nouveau. And through the intervening years, to keep going on and on with it, so that even in some of the more modern buildings, one sees references to Art Nouveau, often attached to (and obviously inspired by) some true item or building or room or shopfront from the actual Art Nouveau period.
An Art Nouveau Building Entrance (seen from inside the foyer) |
Art Nouveau Letterboxes in the Same Building's Foyer |
Art Nouveau Signboard in an Office Building |
I've tried over the years to come up with some ideas - for myself (I'm not scholarly in these things) - to characterize Art Nouveau. I guess the basics for me are the sinuous lines and the delicacy of the "movement" of the lines. The botanical references please me a lot, too, and then there's the famous "whiplash line" that for some Art Nouveau specialists is almost the most famous characteristic of the style.
Whatever it is, it is a joy to behold, whether in architecture, drawings, painting, light fixture, door handles, china and glassware, even the magnificent silver candlesticks (now often reproduced in polished pewter), sculptures, and such. Great fun.
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