art nouveau

Art

2022

We explain what Art Nouveau is, its characteristics, architecture and most representative works. Also, Art Nouveau in Mexico.

Art Nouveau was not looking for a realistic representation.

What is Art Nouveau?

Art Nouveau (from the French "new art") is the name that was given in France (and Belgium) at the end of the 19th century to what we now call Modernism. That is to say, it is one of the many names that this aesthetic trend born in Europe and the United States during the period of fin de siècle ("End of the century") and belle epoque ("Beautiful time"), that is, between 1890 and 1910 approximately.

Other names for the same movement, assigned depending on each country, are Jugendstil (Germany), Nieuwe Kunst (Netherlands), Sezession (Austria), Modern Style (United Kingdom and United States) and Floreale (Italy).

In general, all these terms have in common the idea that a “new”, “young” art was made, adapted to the industrial age and the contemporary world, and far removed from the traditions prevailing until then: academicism (historicism or eclecticism) or rupturism (the realism or the impressionism).

It was an artistic trend of renewal, highly influenced by the idea of ​​progress and Liberty, that the future of the humanity "It had already started". It had an important presence both in the painting and the sculpture, like in the architecture, graphic arts, decorative arts and design of urban furniture.

However, we must not confuse Modernism or Art Nouveau with modern art, which is a much broader category (within which Art Nouveau itself is contained); nor with literary Modernism, which was a movement with similar characteristics typical of Spanish American letters.

It is easy to make these mistakes, since in French and English it is called respectively modernism or modernism to the avant-garde or to modern art itself.

Nor should we confuse Art Nouveau with Art Deco, a later trend that inherited many of its characteristics.

Characteristics of Art Nouveau

Art Nouveau was characterized by the following:

  • Strong inspiration in nature for its forms, especially in the vegetal, combined with materials typical of the industrial era, such as steel and glass.
  • Preference for the curved line and asymmetry, as well as for the aestheticization of the motifs, far from a realistic representation.
  • A certain fascination for exotic motifs, such as oriental designs, as well as graceful and delicate female figures.
  • Tendency to sensuality and eroticism, and to fill all the available space of the work (horror vacui).
  • He undertakes his own artistic techniques, such as mechanical reproduction, woodcut, poster design, and so on.
  • The hierarchy between major arts and minor or decorative arts disappears. Thus, a democratization of the art and beauty.

Most representative works of Art Nouveau

The goddess, by Josep Llimona i Bruguera, is located in Barcelona.

Some of the most representative works of Art Nouveau were:

Painting:

  • The kiss by Gustav Klimt (1862-1918).
  • The dream of the pomegranate by Felice Casorati (1883-1963).
  • Cupid at the costume ball by Franz Stuck (1863-1928).

Sculpture:

  • Maiden Fountain by Josep Llimona i Bruguera (1863-1934).
  • The goddess by Josep Clarà i Ayats (1878-1958).
  • Hex by Philippe Wolfers (1858-1929).

Art Nouveau architecture

Art Nouveau architecture incorporated new materials.

Art Nouveau in architecture represented an important break with the European tradition: it abandoned the church and the palace and dedicated itself to the square, the museum, the dwelling, the theater or the office building.

The basic idea was that architecture should face a restart, and should reflect the economic values ​​of capitalism and its productive forces. This implied the more profitable use of traditional materials (stone, brick, wood) and the incorporation of new materials such as cast iron, glass and cement.

Some of the most representative architectural works of Art Nouveau are:

  • The facade of Casa Batlló by Antonio Gaudí (1852-1926).
  • The building of the Central Train Station in Prague, by Josef Fanta (1856-1954).
  • The Otto Wulf building in Buenos Aires, by Morten F. Rönnow (1877-1972).

Art Nouveau in Mexico

Art Nouveau was used to aesthetically modernize Mexico City.

Art Nouveau arrived in Mexico during the Porfiriato (1876-1911), as part of the attempts of the society of the time to modernize itself aesthetically and connect with its European industrial investors.

Its impact was notorious in the architecture of Mexico City, where it had to coexist with the traditional neoclassical of most of the facades, then decorated with motifs and fittings that imitate the shape of plants, and that hide the Art Nouveau interior of many buildings.

Some of the most famous Art Nouveau buildings in Mexico are:

  • The Grand Hotel of Mexico City (1896-1897), by Jacques Gruber (1870-1936).
  • The building of the Palacio de Hierro in Mexico City (1918-1921), by Paul Dubois (1874-1953).
  • The Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico City, by Adamo Boari (1863-1928) and Federico Mariscal (1829-1905).
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