'Sleek lines, smooth, bright colours': Art deco resurfaces at Lougheed House exhibit - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 12:44 PM | Calgary | -10.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

'Sleek lines, smooth, bright colours': Art deco resurfaces at Lougheed House exhibit

It was an era that brought us the Empire State Building, jazz and new technology. And the 1920s and '30s also introduced a new design esthetic called art deco.

New exhibit showcases everyday household items, from vacuums to vases

Lougheed House has a new art deco exhibit on display until April 29. (Ellis Choe/CBC)

It was an era that brought us the Empire State Building, jazz and new technology, butthe 1920s and '30s also introduced a new design esthetic called art deco.

Calgary's Lougheed House has a new exhibit that focuses on domestic objects from thatera. It featuresmore than 40 items from vacuumsto ashtrays from private collections in the Calgary area.

This FADA Cloud radio dates to 1947, which is later than the classic art deco era, but is still in the deco style. (Ellis Choe/CBC)

"When you see art deco buildings," curator Caroline Loewentold the Homestretch,"you see really new technologies being involved, new materials, sleek lines, smooth, bright colours. It felt very modern."

She says the design movement started in about 1925 in Paris, and stood out in strong contrast to the Great Depression ofthe '30s.

"It was very ...utopic," she said.

"It thought that technology would save us and bring us out of the Great Depression and that we could all have shiny new things in our houses."

The Future Looked Bright: Art Deco in Everyday Life runs at Calgary'sLougheedHouse until April 29.

The Electrolux Model 30 was designed in 1937 to look like a classic 1930s train. It was in production for nearly 20 years, and was a common sight in houses right up through the 1950s. (Ellis Choe/CBC)
This hood ornament is from a 1951 Chevy. There are a lot of art deco items made in the shapes of airplanes, ships, zeppelins and trains because designers wanted to emulate the speed and glamour of the new modes of transportation. (Ellis Choe/CBC)

With files from the Homestretch