Product details:
ISBN13: | 9781350106390 |
ISBN10: | 1350106399 |
Binding: | Paperback |
No. of pages: | 320 pages |
Size: | 244x189 mm |
Weight: | 610 g |
Language: | English |
Illustrations: | 100 b&w illustrations |
15 |
Category:
Designing the Modern Interior
From The Victorians To Today
Publisher: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Date of Publication: 27 December 2018
Number of Volumes: Paperback
Normal price:
Publisher's listprice:
GBP 49.99
GBP 49.99
Your price:
20 450 (19 476 HUF + 5% VAT )
discount is: 20% (approx 5 112 HUF off)
Discount is valid until: 31 December 2024
The discount is only available for 'Alert of Favourite Topics' newsletter recipients.
Click here to subscribe.
Click here to subscribe.
Availability:
printed on demand
Can't you provide more accurate information?
Long description:
A Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2010.
Designing the Modern Interior reveals how the design of the inside spaces of our homes and public buildings is shaped by and shapes our modern culture.
The modern interior has often been narrowly defined by the minimalist work of elite, reforming architects. But a shared modernising impulse, expressed in interior design, extends at least as far back as the Victorians and reaches to our own time. And this spirit of modernisation manifested itself in interiors, designed both by professionals and by amateurs, which did not necessarily look modern and often even aimed to imitate the past.
Designing the Modern Interior presents a new history of the interior from the late 19th to the 21st century. Particular characteristics are consistent across this period: a progressive attitude towards technology; a hyper-consciousness of what it is to live in the present and the future; an overt relationship with the mass media, mass consumption and the marketplace; an emphasis on individualism, interiority and the 'self'; the construction of identities determined by gender, class, race, sexuality and nationhood; and the experiences of urban and suburban life.
Designing the Modern Interior reveals how the design of the inside spaces of our homes and public buildings is shaped by and shapes our modern culture.
The modern interior has often been narrowly defined by the minimalist work of elite, reforming architects. But a shared modernising impulse, expressed in interior design, extends at least as far back as the Victorians and reaches to our own time. And this spirit of modernisation manifested itself in interiors, designed both by professionals and by amateurs, which did not necessarily look modern and often even aimed to imitate the past.
Designing the Modern Interior presents a new history of the interior from the late 19th to the 21st century. Particular characteristics are consistent across this period: a progressive attitude towards technology; a hyper-consciousness of what it is to live in the present and the future; an overt relationship with the mass media, mass consumption and the marketplace; an emphasis on individualism, interiority and the 'self'; the construction of identities determined by gender, class, race, sexuality and nationhood; and the experiences of urban and suburban life.
Table of Contents:
General Introduction: Penny Sparke
PART ONE: THE LATE-NINETEENTH-CENTURY INTERIOR (1870-1900)
Introduction: Emma Ferry
1.Plate Glass and Progress: Victorian Modernity at Home, Trevor Keeble, Kingston University
2.Privacy and Supervision in the Modernised Public House Interior 1872-1902, Fiona Fisher, Kingston University
3.The German Interior at the End of the Nineteenth Century Sabine Wieber, Roehampton University
PART TWO: THE EARLY-TWENTIETH-CENTURY INTERIOR (1900-1940)
Introduction: Penny Sparke
4.Taking Amusement Seriously: Modern Design in the Twenties, Christopher Reed, Lake Forest College, Chicago
5.'The scene in which the daily drama of personal life takes place':
Towards the Modern Interior in early 1930s Britain, Elizabeth Darling,
Oxford Brookes University
6.The Modern Interior as the Geography of Image, Space and Subject, Irene Nierhaus, Bremen University, Germany
7.'Leaving Traces'. Anonymity in the Modernist House, Hilde Heynen, KU Leuven Universitat, Belgium
8.The Geography of the Diagram: The Rose Seidler House, Charles Rice, University of New South Wales, Sydney
PART THREE: THE MID-TWENTIETH-CENTURY INTERIOR (1940-1970)
Introduction: Penny Sparke
9.Hans Scharoun and the Interior, Peter Blundell Jones, The Univrsity of Sheffield
10.New Environments for Modern Living: 'At Home' with the Eameses, Pat
Kirkham, The Bard Graduate Centre for Studies in the Decorative Arts,
Design and Culture, New York
11.Italy's New Domestic Landscape, 1945-1972, Penny Sparke, Kingston University
12.Ocean Liners, Resort Hotels and the Architecture of Leisure, Alice T. Friedman, Wellesley College, Massachusetts
13.Nationalism and Design at the End of Empire, Anne Massey, Kingston University
PART FOUR: THE LATE-TWENTIETH-CENTURY INTERIOR (1970 - present)
Introduction: Trevor Keeble
14.The Dark Side of the Modern Home, David Crowley, Royal College of Art
15.Locating the Modern Impulse within the Japanese Love Hotel, Sarah Chaplin, Kingston University
16.The Contemporary Interior: Trajectories of Biography and Style, Alison J. Clarke, University of Applied Arts, Vienna
17.Beddington Zero Energy Development (BedZED): Encouraging Sustainable Living in the UK, Anne Chick, Kingston University
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index
PART ONE: THE LATE-NINETEENTH-CENTURY INTERIOR (1870-1900)
Introduction: Emma Ferry
1.Plate Glass and Progress: Victorian Modernity at Home, Trevor Keeble, Kingston University
2.Privacy and Supervision in the Modernised Public House Interior 1872-1902, Fiona Fisher, Kingston University
3.The German Interior at the End of the Nineteenth Century Sabine Wieber, Roehampton University
PART TWO: THE EARLY-TWENTIETH-CENTURY INTERIOR (1900-1940)
Introduction: Penny Sparke
4.Taking Amusement Seriously: Modern Design in the Twenties, Christopher Reed, Lake Forest College, Chicago
5.'The scene in which the daily drama of personal life takes place':
Towards the Modern Interior in early 1930s Britain, Elizabeth Darling,
Oxford Brookes University
6.The Modern Interior as the Geography of Image, Space and Subject, Irene Nierhaus, Bremen University, Germany
7.'Leaving Traces'. Anonymity in the Modernist House, Hilde Heynen, KU Leuven Universitat, Belgium
8.The Geography of the Diagram: The Rose Seidler House, Charles Rice, University of New South Wales, Sydney
PART THREE: THE MID-TWENTIETH-CENTURY INTERIOR (1940-1970)
Introduction: Penny Sparke
9.Hans Scharoun and the Interior, Peter Blundell Jones, The Univrsity of Sheffield
10.New Environments for Modern Living: 'At Home' with the Eameses, Pat
Kirkham, The Bard Graduate Centre for Studies in the Decorative Arts,
Design and Culture, New York
11.Italy's New Domestic Landscape, 1945-1972, Penny Sparke, Kingston University
12.Ocean Liners, Resort Hotels and the Architecture of Leisure, Alice T. Friedman, Wellesley College, Massachusetts
13.Nationalism and Design at the End of Empire, Anne Massey, Kingston University
PART FOUR: THE LATE-TWENTIETH-CENTURY INTERIOR (1970 - present)
Introduction: Trevor Keeble
14.The Dark Side of the Modern Home, David Crowley, Royal College of Art
15.Locating the Modern Impulse within the Japanese Love Hotel, Sarah Chaplin, Kingston University
16.The Contemporary Interior: Trajectories of Biography and Style, Alison J. Clarke, University of Applied Arts, Vienna
17.Beddington Zero Energy Development (BedZED): Encouraging Sustainable Living in the UK, Anne Chick, Kingston University
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index