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Sonia Delaunay: Art Into Fashion
Diana Vreeland

Sonia Delaunay: Art Into Fashion

George Braziller (Sep 14, 2005)
9780807611661
| Paperback
104 pages | 8.5 x 11 inch
$ 17.95 | Value: $ 17.95
Dewey 746.920924
LC Classification TT507 .D4513 1986
LC Control No. 84027480

Subject

  • Art, Abstract - France
  • Costume design
  • Fashion design - France - Paris - History - 20th century

Plot

The exciting, novel fashions of Sonia Delauney, a member of the avant-garde movement in Paris in the early twentieth century, heralded the advent of a radically new concept in clothing design. Like many champions of Modernism, Sonia Delauney believed that art should be used to redecorate modern life, and that design should be truly artistic. By applying the bright colors of the peasant costumes from her native Russia to the elegant silhouettes that were currently in vogue in Paris, she translated theory into practice and produced a stunning series of clothes for the Jazz Age. Like the contemporary Orphist paintings created by her husband Robert, Sonia Delauney's designs are characterized by their vibrant colors and sharply patterned geometric collages. They were worn by starlets Gloria Swanson and Gaby; her imaginative theater costumes were commissioned by another great advocate of Modernism, Diaghilev, for the Bullet Russes. Indeed, Sonia Delauney's clothing, as exalted in the poetry of Tristan Tzara and Guillaume Apollinaire, epitomized the spirit of the new age. Illustrated throughout