Marcel Corrette, Art Nouveau Floral Study of Bird's-Eye Lotus, Watercolor
- Dimensions :
- H48 x W60
- Color :
- yellow
- Material :
- paper
- Style :
- art deco
Marcel corrette (fennervilliers 1896 - nancy 1946) bird's foot trefoil or lotus corniculatus gouache pencil and watercolor in his mat name of the plant annotated by the artist at the top right furniture and decoration designer for the majorelle family during the heyday of the école de nancy, marcel corrette helped introduce the art deco style, which was still influenced by art nouveau. Between 1920 and 1930, he created numerous glass paste objects with the ceramist and designer of glass paste objects amalric walter. The herbariums available to artists were a real source of inspiration for art nouveau, which was booming at the end of the 19th century. In the series of drawings by marcel corrette that we are presenting, we can see that the representation of plants oscillates between a naturalistic vision and a certain stylization. To achieve this decorative stylization that will serve him to create ornaments used by the decorative art workshops in nancy for which he collaborates (glass paste objects, vases, jewelry, furniture), the artist represents plants from different angles to better isolate certain aspects such as rhythm, color and certain geometric structures in order to extract a decorative motif. Slightly yellowed paper, tiny folds and tears on the edges. These defects are hidden by the mat and do not interfere with the reading of the image dimensions: 48 X 60 cm.
4.98 ()