Shaping the American Interior
Structures, Contexts and Practices
Paula Lupkin, Penny Sparke, Paula Lupkin, Penny Sparke
- 212 páginas
- English
- ePUB (apto para móviles)
- Disponible en iOS y Android
Shaping the American Interior
Structures, Contexts and Practices
Paula Lupkin, Penny Sparke, Paula Lupkin, Penny Sparke
Información del libro
Bringing together 12 original essays, Shaping the American Interior maps out, for the first time, the development and definition of the field of interiors in the United States in the period from 1870 until 1960. Its interdisciplinary approach encompasses a broad range of people, contexts, and practices, revealing the design of the interior as a collaborative modern enterprise comprising art, design, manufacture, commerce, and identity construction. Rooted in the expansion of mass production and consumption in the last years of the nineteenth century, new and diverse structures came to define the field and provide formal and informal contexts for design work. Intertwined with, but distinct from, architecture and merchandising, interiors encompassed a diffuse range of individuals, institutions, and organizations engaged in the definition of identity, the development of expertise, and the promotion of consumption. This volume investigates the fluid pre-history of the American profession of interior design, charting attempts to commoditize taste, shape modern conceptions of gender and professionalism, define expertise and authority through principles and standards, marry art with industry and commerce, and shape mass culture in the United States.
Preguntas frecuentes
Información
Índice
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 Designing professionals: architects, decorators, clients, and the interior design process in the nineteenth century
- 2 Dealing in interiors: how Duveen Brothers and Maison Carlhian shaped an eighteenth-century French salon in 1920s New York
- 3 Elsie de Wolfe: a professional interior decorator
- 4 Designing the gender contest: (re)Locating the gay decorator in the history of interior design
- 5 For men by men: furnishing the YMCA
- 6 The Art-in-Trades Club: selling style
- 7 Demonstrating the profession: interior decorating instruction on early television
- 8 Coeds and t-squares: interior design education and home economics
- 9 “Principles, not effects”: Edgar Kaufmann, Jr., MoMA and the legitimization of interior design
- 10 “Apology areas”: interior decorating and the marketplace in the 1950s
- 11 Imaging interior design: beneath, beside, and within architecture
- 12 Modernism’s glass ceiling: women in commercial design after WWII
- 13 The future of cross-disciplinary practice
- Index