Sunday, March 22, 2026

Nouveau

Anonymous American Designer
Floral Wreaths
ca. 1908
machine printed wallpaper
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum


Anonymous British Designer
Tulips
1907
intaglio-printed wallpaper
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Duxer Porzellanmanufaktur (Bohemia)
Bust of a Woman with Irises
ca. 1900
porcelain
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Duxer Porzellanmanufaktur (Bohemia)
Bust of a Woman with Lady Slippers
ca. 1900
porcelain
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Aubrey Beardsley
Untitled
ca. 1890
line-block print
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Ethel Reed
The Boston Sunday Herald
ca. 1895
lithograph (advertising poster)
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

René Lalique
Medal for Army Orphans
1916
brass
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

René Lalique
Stick Pin Finial with Butterfly
ca. 1890-1910
opal and silver, partly enameled
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Georges-Alfred Bottini
Woman with Irises
1898
lithograph
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts

Friedrich König
Design for Ornamental Figure
ca. 1905
watercolor on paper
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Anonymous French Designer
Anemone de Venus
ca. 1910
block-printed wallpaper
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Anonymous American Designer
Blossoms
ca. 1906-1907
machine-printed wallpaper
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Grueby Faience Company (Revere, Massachusetts)
Mermaid
ca. 1898
glazed ceramic tile
National Museum of American History, Washington DC

Hector Guimard
Paperweight from Madame Guimard's Desk
ca. 1909-1913
alabaster, bronze and gold
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Henry van de Velde
Tropon - l'Aliment le plus concentré
1898
lithograph (advertising poster)
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Henri Martin
Young Woman in Flowered Dress
ca. 1900
oil on canvas
Musée Henri Martin, Cahors

Fernand Moreau
Vase
ca. 1905
glazed earthenware
Reynolda House Museum of American Art,
Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Tiffany & Co.
Vase
ca. 1910
glass
Reynolda House Museum of American Art,
Winston-Salem, North Carolina

24 May 1946

    In the church the great marble memorial in the chapel next to the chancel hung over me, brooding in its eighteenth-century conceit.  What a world of egoism it was in itself!
    Family pride sweeping and stinking and swaggering up to God.  The marble peruke, the bloated marble bags under the eyes, the marble sneer (I mean a sneer) on the cold lip.  The sneer is nothing assumed, not a facial trick: it is just the black look of worldliness solidified.  Perhaps sneer is wrong.  It is not contempt; it is just preening, puffing of one's gold guineas and fine acres.  But I loved its solidity.  The medieval things in a church are nearly always ruthlessly repaired, so one flies to the memorials, the eighteenth-century marble world for relief. 

10 August 1946

    It was the New Yorker yesterday that asked me for a story.  Now today I am sent the Sun Bathing Review and told that Bernard Shaw, Laurence Housman, Naomi Mitchison, Vera Brittain, A.E. Coppard, J.C. Flugel, Robert Gibbings and C.E.M. Joad have written for it and will I write too – a likely theme, the value of nudity in schools "as a means of countering the unhealthy practices with which anyone who has been educated at a boarding school is familiar."
    I think the only thing I can truthfully say in reply is that I feel that nudity would increase the "unhealthy practices" whatever they may be, perhaps set a fashion through the whole school for them – that is, "nudity" of this magaziny-shiny-photograph sort.  The booklet is uncomfortable.  I know that if someone came into this room at this moment, I would hurriedly explain that it had been sent to me, and that I had not bought it for my own delight.  Why do other people's fetishes seem ugly and improper?  I am fond of naked people, but not of a great to-do and business of nakedness.  To read this magazine is to be half told that if everyone would suddenly strip off their clothes the world might be made quite wonderful.  

– from The Journals of Denton Welch (who was born in 1915, gravely injured in 1935, then wrote the journals between 1942 and his early death in 1948), edited by Michael De-la-Noy (1984)