"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Art Nouveau, or "new art" in French, is an architectural and artistic movement that emerged in the late ...
Le rendez-vous annuel des amateurs d’Art nouveau et d’Art Déco à Bruxelles s’installe dans la capitale dès ce samedi 14 mars, le temps d’emmener le public pendant ces trois prochains week-ends à la dé ...
It is difficult to convey the giddy joy I felt one day in Berlin-that gray grid of a city-upon opening an unsuspecting gate and feeling in my hand no ordinary doorknob, but iron in the shape of a ...
When the movie My Fair Lady opens in October, it will hammer into the public consciousness a new appreciation of an old art style that was known in its day as art nouveau—new art. In planning the film ...
"The Triumph of Nature: Art Nouveau from the Chrysler Museum of Art" Credit: Brian Chilson Like a renegade plant sprouting through cracks in the concrete, Art Nouveau blossomed in Europe and the U.S.
Jean-Christophe Camuset est un journaliste spécialisé en déco/design et en tech. Dans ses articles, il explore ces deux domaines, mais surtout leurs nombreux points d’intersection. Cela le conduit à ...
Swathes of purple, orange and yellow find their way back to the walls of a municipal auditorium in northern Italy. The Stadttheater in Merano, Italy, was designed by Martin Dülfer, a key figure in the ...
Medusa plates, ‘Challenger Reports, vol. 4’ (1882), Royal Society Edinburgh Archive (all images from ‘Art Forms from the Abyss: Ernst Haeckel’s Images From The HMS Challenger Expedition,’ courtesy ...
William L. Carqueville, "Lippincott's, April" (1895), 19 x 12 7/16 inches, Leonard A. Lauder Collection of American Posters (all images courtesy the Metropolitan Museum of Art) Deceptively niche as it ...
It was a department store that made Hermann Leopold Ammende the wealthiest man in the coastal Estonian resort town of Pärnu, and that allowed him to build the mansion that now bears his name. But ...
Art lovers may remember that 7 years ago the Dayton Art Institute hosted an exhibit focused on the style of decorative art known as Art Nouveau and one of its most popular artists, Alphonse Mucha.