"[Covers] a range of important issues for the history of interior design in the 20th century."― Journal of Design History From the nineteenth-century Arts and Crafts movement to the present day―from Art Nouveau, Bauhaus, the Modern Movement, and Art Deco to High-Tech and green design―every style of interior design since 1900 is charted in this wide-ranging survey. Design in the twentieth century saw many changes in direction, including the emergence of professional "interior decoration" and its evolution into interior design. Interiors, domestic and other, are explored and placed within their social, political, economic, and cultural context.
This revised and expanded edition is brought into the twenty-first century with a new chapter on sustainable design that focuses on public spaces such as hotels, offices, factories, and shops. 217 illustrations, 59 in color
Anne Massey is professor of design and culture at Huddersfield University and professorial fellow at the University of the Creative Arts, England. She is the author of The Independent Group: Modernism and Mass Culture, 1945–1959; Interior Design Since 1900; and six other books. She has edited five volumes, including A Companion to Contemporary Design Since 1945, and was founding coeditor of the journal Interiors: Design, Architecture, Culture. She lives in London.
Really interesting. Actually starts way back in the 1800s with the Arts & Crafts movement. The book focuses on upper and middle class design (since colloquial design was and still is more eclectic and functional), but later on it talks about commercial interiors and pop interior design. It covers a broad range of history and social context for everything.
I feel like the book didn't go into much detail into the ideas that informed interior design theories. I'd have been interested in that.
Also, it explains how interior design and architecture are closely linked but I feel like the last few chapters focused too much on big architectural projects and didn't talk much about domestic interior design.
Importantly, this book has also cemented my belief that the 60s were hell for interior design.
By now we all know that women have had fewer opportunities to learn and practice design (and in the early years none at all), men have taken or been given credit for work actually designed or produced by women, and women were paid less then their male counterparts. None of this surprises anyone anymore, but it still infuriates me every time I think about it!
Although familiar with some of the names and works presented, many were unknown to me. Their fascinating stories often transcended their creative capacity. They served as suffragettes, anti-fascists, resistance fighters, and did many other good deeds. In truth not all women designers lean to the left (In a book about the women of the Bauhaus you’ll come across a few Nazis) but you aren’t going to learn about them here.
The illustrations were small but good and mostly in color. We’re given a lot of new material to digest. I found the writing so gripping I read the bulk of it in one day!
So I highly recommend, “Women in Design” and hope it will travel beyond the design community.
I don’t think you can successfully make a small comprehensive book on such a large subject. Rapidly going from one artist to another didn’t give the reader a time to breathe.
Pictures are critical, but in my opinion the limited illustrations we got weren’t big enough, and not all of them were in color.. of course this is the price you pay for a small inexpensive book.
However, I noticed some problems in content.
The author constantly refers to a certain style as Art Deco. That’s how most people know it. The term “arts decorates” was first used in France in 1858 when style made its debut at the 1925 World's Fair in Paris—the “Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes” or in English, “The International Exhibition of Modern and Industrial Decorative Arts”. But she neglects to mention that the actual term, Art Deco, was coined in a 1966 newspaper article by Hillary Gelson I think using this anachronistically and without explaination confuses the reader.
She also refers to Busby Berkeley’s famous films from the 30s as MGM productions. Berkeley’s work for MGM came later. The “Gold Digger” movies and “Footlights Parade” were all created at Warner Brothers. And how can you mention the Astaire-Rogers films without crediting art director Van Nest Polglaise?
The “World of Art” series has produced many fine books. I just don’t think of this particular title as a successful effort.