history of design

55
Victorian 1820-1850

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History of Design for high school design class

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Page 1: History of design

Victorian 1820-1850

Page 2: History of design

Webster’s Dictionary Published

Napoleon Dies

Morse telegraph is used

Industrial Revolution

Page 3: History of design

• Named after Queen Victoria crowned Queen of England in 1835

• Aesthetic response to the Industrial Revolution

Victorian

Page 4: History of design

• Industrialization flourished

• Advertising boomed • Artists forced to become

machines• Printmaking from 1867

World’s Fair -Japanese• Middle class finally had

some money, but no aesthetic quality

• Disguising the industrialization

Victorian

Page 5: History of design

• “Fluff”• Comfort comes from

clutter• Ornamentation• Function was not

predominate over ornamentation

• Disguise is the answer to all problems

Victorian Motifs

Page 6: History of design
Page 7: History of design
Page 8: History of design

Voigt House

Page 9: History of design

Arts and Crafts 1850-1910

Page 10: History of design

13th Amendment to abolish slavery

World’s Fair introduces Japanese art to the West

Alexander Graham Bell invents telephone

Thomas Edison invents the electric light

George Eastman perfects his Kodak box camera

Eiffel tower completed for Paris Exhibition

Henry Ford builds first automobile

Page 11: History of design

• A return to beauty based on form and not on ornamentation

• Artists reestablished aesthetic understanding

• Ornamentation was secondary to beauty of the form itself

• Art should not be separated from everyday life

• Workshops and guilds established again to teach traditional methods as in medieval times.

Arts and Crafts

Page 12: History of design

• Simplicity of form• Honest use of

materials• Fighting “ugliness”• Modern printing

became a serious art form

• Functional• Straight lined

Arts and Crafts Motifs

Page 13: History of design

Gustav

Stickley

Page 14: History of design

Frank Lloyd Wright

Page 15: History of design

Meyer May House, 1908 Grand Rapids

Page 16: History of design

Art Nouveau 1890-1915

Page 17: History of design

World War I begins (1914)

First jazz record

First steel and glass building

Modern Art Movement begins

Page 18: History of design

• International Influence

• Rebellion of Victorian Era

• Desire for a “new age”

• Art and Industry were to work together to create beautiful, functional pieces

Art Nouveau

Page 19: History of design

• Fluid Lines• Curved Lines• Japanese elegance• Symbolist mystery• Floral and flat

patterns• Inspired by

illuminated manuscripts

Art Nouveau Motifs

Page 20: History of design
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Page 22: History of design

Modern 1908-1935

Page 23: History of design

Mussolini comes into power

First full length talking film

Adolf Hitler is appointed German Chancellor

Page 24: History of design

Modernism

• Profound political unrest and change

• Rapidly changing machinery and technology

• Forward Looking• Rejection of

decoration• Function only

Page 25: History of design

Modernism Motifs

• Free Form Lettering

• Asymmetrical Design

• Function Only• Free Alignment

of Typography

Page 26: History of design

Different Styles of Modernism

• Futurism• Constructivism• Bauhaus• International

Style

Page 27: History of design

Futurism

• No nostalgia!• New religion of

Speed• Kinetic • Dynamics of the

universe displayed in design and art

Page 28: History of design

Constructivism• Early Soviet Youth

Movement• Man as whole being-

spiritual, cognitive and physical

• Take viewer from passive role into active

• Group more important than individual

Page 29: History of design

Bauhaus

• Combined fine art and applied art

• Asymmetry• Rectangular Grid

Structure for design• Use of order• Dropping all capital

letters

Page 30: History of design

Dadaism 1910-1925

Page 31: History of design

Dadaism

• Invented by German refugee of WWI

• Scorned that art was the highest form of expression

• Rejection of organization

• Poetry, theater and art combined

Page 32: History of design

• Widely scattered typography

• Removed elegance and good taste

• Crammed images• Photomantage

Dadaism Motifs

Page 33: History of design

Marcel Duchamp

Page 34: History of design

1920’s 1930’s

Page 35: History of design

Art Deco 1920-1935

Page 36: History of design

Discovery of King Tut’s Tomb

Science of Aerodynamics

Recovery of WWI

Spanish Civil Was begins

Page 37: History of design

Art Deco

• Middle class was feeling threatened by abstractness of Modern Design

• Industrial use of plastics

• Desire to feel affluent

after such a gruesome World War

Page 38: History of design

Art Deco Motifs• Huge reference to

Egyptian artifacts and symbols

• Space ships and speed

• Rectilinear rather than horizontal

• Geometric rather than organic

Page 39: History of design
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Page 41: History of design

Heroic Realism 1930-1945

Page 42: History of design

World War II begins

Women in workforce

Atomic Bomb is used in WWII

The first automatic computer is developed

Page 43: History of design

Heroic Realism

• Emphasis on family

• Women in provider role

• Future hope

• Strength in society uniting

Page 44: History of design

Heroic Realism Motifs

• Clean lines in design

• Clear messages

• Propaganda

• This design style is still seen in countries like North Korea

Page 45: History of design

Late Modern 1945-1980

Page 46: History of design

Elvis Presley first rock and roll hit

Color television

Korean War

Soviets launch Sputnik I -satellite

U.S. develops laser

Bombing North Vietnam

Apollo II first manned lunar landing

Page 47: History of design

Late Modernism

• Revival in Design

• Psychedelic Art

• Japanese Influence

Page 48: History of design

Late Modernism

• Revival

• Nostalgic after war

• Questioning where we go from here…

Page 49: History of design

Late Modernism• Psychedelic Art

• Cartoon influence

• Western Religious ideas and styles

• Open view of love

• Influence of hallucinogenic drugs

Page 50: History of design

Late Modernism

• Japanese Style

• 1970 Japanese World Fair

• Straight lines

• Bold colors

Page 51: History of design
Page 52: History of design

Contemporary 1980-present

Page 53: History of design

Contemporary

• Sustainable Design or GREEN Design

-design that leaves as little footprint as possible upon the earth

-conscientious of materials used or recycled materials, fair trade materials, minimal to no toxins in product, compostable after-life, local materials

Page 54: History of design

Contemporary

• Design: a response to chaos - retreat to modern design-Minimal -Reflective of early modern-Tactile-Viewer involved -Elements of surprise-Simplicity-Environmentally concerned-Experimental use of

materials

Page 55: History of design

Contemporary

• Clean design

• Form and function

• Speed