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Title: Art et Décoration

 

Place of Publication: Paris, France France

 

Publisher: Librairie Centrale des Beaux Arts

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1897-1925

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-28, 1897-1910*

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Art et Décoration, could be described as “the French Studio”. It was launched four years after its British counterpart and had the same editorial style as The Studio with long, well-illustrated articles on contemporary fine, decorative and applied art, together with book and exhibition reviews and news items. The focus of Art et Décoration was on French, Belgian and Western European art. It includes extensive coverage of several international exhibitions including the Exposition Universelle et Industrielle in Paris in 1900. Publication of Art et Décoration was suspended between August 1914-April 1919. In June 1914 it absorbed L’Art Décoratif.

 

 

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Title: Art Workers' Quarterly

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: Chapman & Hall

 

Frequency: Quareterly

 

Period of Publication: 1902-1906

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-5, 1902-1906, plus two special issues, 1908

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: The Art Workers' Quarterly, subtitled, A Portfolio of Practical Designs for Decorative and Applied Arts, was published in five volumes by Chapman & Hall, London, between 1902 and 1906. The editor was W.G. Paulson Townsend, the author of several books and articles on the decorative arts. In his foreword to volume 1, no. 1, he wrote that the object of The Art Workers' Quarterly, was provide a source of inspiration for art workers and “to supply designs in a readily applicable form to those who do not invent, plan, or adapt ornament, and who find difficulty in obtaining good and suitable suggestions for their work. Further, it is his aim to assist those who may have some knowledge of the principles on which ornamental design is constructed, by publishing specimens of good work from the best historical and contemporary examples”. Like The Craftsman, launched the previous year in the USA, William Morris was the subject of the first article in The Art Workers’ Quarterly. Subsequent articles reported on the work and activities of the leading art schools including the Royal Academy Schools, Royal School of Art Needlework, the Royal College of Art, Central School of Arts and Crafts, Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts, and Keswick School of Industrial Arts, and the principle craft organizations, guilds and societies such as the Church Crafts League, the Home Arts and Industries Association, the Dress Designers Exhibition Society, the Clarion Guild of Handicrafts, and the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society. There were also articles on Lace Making in Ireland; the British Section at the St. Louis Exposition of 1904; the Impact of Modern Social and Economic Conditions on the Decorative Arts; the architecture of Letchworth Garden City, etc. These were interspersed with practical, well-illustrated articles on wood block printing, mural decoration, ornamental lettering, metalwork, embroidery, weaving, furniture, ceramics, stained glass, bookbinding, etc. Townsend was successful in attracting many of the leading commentators on the decorative arts to write pieces for The Art Workers’ Quarterly, including May Morris, Walter Crane, J. Illingworth Kay, Alexander Fisher, Lawrence Weaver, Bernard Rackham, Silvester Sparrow, Alfred Stevens, A. Romney Green, and James Guthrie. Among artists and designers whose work featured in The Art Workers’ Quarterly were some of the major figures in the English Arts and Crafts movement including Ambrose Heal Jr., Walter Crane, C.F.A. Voysey, Alexander Fisher, May Morris, R.A. Dawson. W.J. Neatby, Harold Stabler, Allan Vigers, W. Curtis Green, A. Romney Green. Heywood Sumner, Charles E. Dawson, Edward Spencer, Bernard Cuzner, Arthur Gaskin, Charles Spooner, C.R. Ashbee, Paul Woodroffe, Ernest Gimson, Mary Seton Fraser Tytler (Mrs G.F. Watts), Ernestine Mills and Sidney Barnsley An additional two special issues of The Art Workers’ Quarterly were published in August and December 1908. These contained the papers and extracts of papers read at the Third International Art Congress for the development of Drawing and Art Teaching and the Application to Industries held in London, August, 1908, as well as a record of the Retrospective Exhibition of Students’ Works, held at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, in connection with the Congress. Together with volumes 1-5 of The Art Workers’ Quarterly, these have also been digitized for ReVIEW.

 

 

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Printing

 

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Title: The Artist

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: A. Constable; Paris: H. Floury; New York: Truslove, Hanson & Comba

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1880-1902

 

Period covered by AHR net: Vols 18-30, 33 1896-1902

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: The Artist, Vols 18-30, 33 1896-1901, 1902, published by ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE & CO. of WESTMINSTER The Artist and Journal of Home Culture, also The Artist, was a monthly art and design journal published in London by Archibald Constable & Co. from 1880 to 1902. From 1881 to 1894 the full title was The Artist and Journal of Home Culture. From 1896 the full title became The Artist: An Illustrated Monthly Record of Arts, Crafts and Industries. An American edition was published in New York by Truslove, Hanson & Comba.

 

 

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Title: L'Artista Moderno. Rivista illustrata d'arte applicata

 

Place of Publication: Turin Italy

 

Publisher: Società Tipografico-Editrice Nazionale (S.T.E.N.)

 

Frequency: Twice a month; monthly from January 1920

 

Period of Publication: 1901-1941

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes III-XXV, 1904-1922

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Despite its long history, L'Artista Moderno is extremely scarce and little known outside Italy. It is one of the most important sources on contemporary decorative art, particularly the Stile Liberty (Art Nouveau) style, in Italy during the period covered by ReVIEW. It was published bimonthly and contains well-illustrated articles on ceramics, glass, furniture, poster design, graphic art, jewellery metalwork, textiles, interior design and architecture. In its latter years L'Artista Moderno was superseded by more radical Italian arts journals such as Domus.

 

 

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Architecture

 

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Decorative Art and Design

 

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Title: Arts & Crafts

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: Hutchinson & Co.

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1904-1906

 

Period covered by AHR net: 1904-1906

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Intended for both the professional and the amateur craftsperson, Arts & Crafts is an important source on the middle period of the Arts and Crafts movement in England.  In addition to practical articles on craftmaking, particularly jewellery, bookbinding, furniture, metalwork and embroidery, it included articles on the work of some of the leading names in the Arts and Crafts movement, such as M.H. Baillie Scott, and Walter Crane.  It also contained book reviews and reports on exhibitions of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society, the Paris Salon, the Royal Academy, etc.

 

 

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Arts and Crafts Movement

 

Ceramics

 

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Embroidery

 

Illustration

 

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Title: Arts and Decoration

 

Place of Publication:

 

Publisher: Adam Budge Inc.

 

Period of Publication: 1912

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Arts and Decoration published its first issue in 1910. It absorbed Art World in 1918 (and was known briefly as "The Art World and Arts and Decoration", before reverting to "Arts and Decoration" in 1919. No issue or contribution copyright renewals were found for this serial. It ceased publication in 1942. The journal contained articles on contemporary American fine, decorative and applied arts; art news; and exhibition and book reviews

 

 

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Painting

 

Illustration

 

Decorative Art and Design

 

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Furniture

 

Interior Design and Decoration

 

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Glass

 

Sculpture

 

 

 

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Title: The Craftsman

 

Place of Publication: Eastwood, NY USA

 

Publisher: United Crafts

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1901-1916

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-31, 1901-1916

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: The Craftsman played a seminal role in promoting the philosophy and ideals of the Arts and Crafts movement in America. It was founded by the designer Gustav Stickley (1858-1942) and published by his workshop United Crafts in Eastwood, New York. The influence of the English craft aesthetic on the The Craftsman is evident in the fact that four of the five articles in the first issue of the journal were on the work of William Morris and Morris & Company, and the second issue was largely devoted to the writings of John Ruskin. Other articles in the first two years of the journal included ‘Revival of English Handicrafts: the Haslemere Industries’; ‘Cobden-Sanderson and the Doves Bindery’; and ‘Some Cornish Craftsmen’. It was only towards the end of the second year of The Craftsman that it began to turn its attention to the crafts in other countries, and particularly America.    Later articles include ‘René Lalique: His Rank Among Contemporary Artists’; ‘L’Art Nouveau, Its Origin and Development’; ‘Rookwood Pottery’; ‘Workshops and Residence of M. René Lalique’; ‘L'Art Nouveau: An Argument and Defence’; ‘Korin and the Decorative Art of Japan’; ‘Japanese Book Illustrations’; ‘Craftsmanship in the New York Schools’; ‘The Influence of the "Mission Style" Upon the Civic and Domestic Architecture of Modern California’, ‘August Rodin’; ‘Mural Painting from the American Point of View’; 'Tiffany and Company, at the St. Louis Exposition’; ‘The Future of Ceramics in America’; ‘Rossetti and Botticelli: a Comparison of Ideals and Art’; ‘The Decorations of the Chancel of Saint Thomas' Church, New York City: Work of John La Farge and Augustus St. Gaudens; ‘The New Art in Photography: Work of Clarence H. White, a Leader Among the Photo-Secessionists’; ‘Photography as One of the Fine Arts: the Camera Pictures of Alvin Langdon Coburn’; ‘Is There a Sex Distinction in Art? The Attitude of the Critic Toward Women's Exhibits’; ‘Why the Handicraft Guild at Chipping Campden Has Not Been a Business Success’; ‘Modern German Art: its Revelation of Present Social and Political Conditions in Prussianized Germany’; ‘An afternoon with Walter Crane’; ‘Town Planning in Theory and in Practice: the Work of Raymond Unwin’; ‘Mary Cassatt's Achievement: its Value to the World of Art’; ‘The strange genius of Aubrey Beardsley’; and ‘The new idea in French furniture, as expressed by Maurice Dufrène’ Gustav Stickley wrote frequently for The Craftsman.  Among other contributors were Charles F. Binns, Ernest A. Batchelder, Ralph Waldo Emerson, G.K. Chesterton and Leopold Stokowski.

 

 

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Available: Now

 

 

 

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Title: Dekorative Kunst

 

Place of Publication: Munich Germany

 

Publisher: Verlaganstalt F. Bruckmann A.-G.

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1897-1929

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-31, 1897-1922

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Dekorative Kunst was founded by H. (Hugo) Bruckmann (1863-1941), in association with the art critic J. (Julius) Meier-Graefe (1867-1935) and the writer and publisher Georg Hirth (1841-1916). The journal focused exclusively on contemporary decorative and applied art, particularly furniture, interior design, ceramics, glass, jewelry, metalwork and textiles. It played a significant role in promoting the Art Nouveau and Arts and Crafts movements in Germany.  In its early years, coverage was international, however, after, c.1910 the journal concentrated more on the German and Austrian art. Notable among contributors to Dekorative Kunst were the art dealer S. (Siegfied) Bing (1838-1905), and the writer/designers Henry van de Velde (1863-1957) and Hermann Muthesius (1861-1927).    Among the numerous artists and designers whose work featured in the journal were Peter Behrens, Richard Riemerschmid, C.R. Ashbee, M.H. Baillie Scott, C.F.A. Voysey, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Josef Hoffmann, Koloman Moser and Gustav Klimt. Dekorative Kunst included long reports on the work of the Wiener Werkstätte and members of the Deutscher Werkbund, and on international exhibitions, particularly the Paris Exposition of 1900, the Esposizione Internationale d’Arte Decorativa Moderna in Turin in 1902, and the Louisiana Purchase Exhibition in St. Louis in 1904.

 

 

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Decorative Art and Design

 

Architecture

 

Furniture

 

Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Jewelry

 

Metalwork

 

Textile Design

 

Bookbinding

 

Graphic Design

 

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Title: Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration

 

Place of Publication: Darmstadt Germany

 

Publisher: Alexander Koch

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1897-1932

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-27, 1897-1911*

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration, sometime known as “the German Studio”, was launched four years after its British counterpart. It is similar, both in size and format, to The Studio, and like its predecessor, focused on the work of contemporary artists. It also included book and exhibition reviews and news items. Although international in its coverage, Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration had a bias towards German, Austrian, Scandinavian and Central European art. It included extensive reports on the Exposition Universelle et Industrielle in Paris in 1900, the Esposizione Internale d’Arte Decorativa Moderna held in Turin in 1902, and the work of the Wiener Werkstätte and the Deutsche Werkstätte.

 

 

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Architecture

 

Interior Design and Decoration

 

Furniture

 

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Glass

 

Jewellery

 

Metalwork

 

Painting

 

Sculpture

 

Textile Design

 

Available: 1897-1911 available now; 1912-1925 available soon

 

 

 

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Title: Il Giovane Artista Moderno

 

Place of Publication: Turin Italy

 

Publisher: E. Cordier Editore

 

Frequency: Fortnightly

 

Period of Publication: 1902-1903

 

Period covered by AHR net: 1902-1903

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Rare and fragile magazine. Each issue consists of 12 loose-leaf pages containing an introduction followed by numerous examples of contemporary Italian decorative and applied art, e.g. ceramics, glass, jewelry, art metalwork, furniture, posters, advertising graphics, illustration, etc. The magazine was heavily influenced by the prevailing Stile (Art Nouveau) style and was probably launched to coincide with the Esposizione Internazionale d'Arte Decorativa Moderna (International Exposition of Modern Decorative Arts) held in Turin in 1902. Il Giovane Artista Moderna was succeeded by L'Artista Moderno. Rivista illustrata d'arte applicata (1904-1941). Although initially also issued fortnightly and continuing the volume sequence of Il Giovane Artista Moderna, L'Artista Moderno. Rivista illustrata d'arte was more conventional in its format.

 

 

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Painting

 

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Advertising Design

 

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Title: The House

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: Horace Cox, H. Virtue, etc.

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1897-1903

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-8, 11, 1897-1901, 1902

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: In the introduction to the first issue of The House the editor observed that “There are now dozens of journals which have to do with the dressing and adornment of the body; but strange to say, there is not one dealing exclusively with the dressing of the house. “ This, they asserted would be the function of The House.  Over the next five years the magazine covered every conceivable aspect of the furnishing and management of the Victorian home with articles on furniture, lighting, wallpaper, carpets and rugs, tiles, art needlework, ceramics, glassware, decorative woodcarving, stained glass, art metalwork, etc. It also includes book and exhibition reviews. Among artists, designers and firms whose work feature in The House are Walter Crane, Liberty & Co., Heal & Sons, G.C. Haité, H. Stacy Marks, E.J. Poynter and John Ruskin. The influence of the Arts and Crafts movement is evident in many of the articles.

 

 

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Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Embroidery

 

Woodcarving

 

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Lighting

 

Wallpaper

 

Stained Glass

 

Textile Design

 

Metalwork

 

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Title: Industrial Arts

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: Bernard Jones Publications Ltd.

 

Frequency: Quarterly

 

Period of Publication: 1936

 

Period covered by AHR net: 1936

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Short-lived design journal – only four issues published. Contains articles by Eric Gill, Jan Tschichold, László Moholy-Nagy, Duncan Grant, Raymond Loewy, Norman Bel Geddes, Raymond McGrath, Xanti Schwawinsky, Laurelle Guild, Paul Bonet, Herbert Beyer, Eileen Hunter, Imre Reiner and others on streamlined transport, aluminium tableware, Surrealist bookbinding, modern decorative art in Sweden, the murals of Robert Delaunay, advertising art, the design of modern shops, sculpture on machine-made buildings, modern jewellery, the posters of Austin Cooper, abstract painting and the new typography, propaganda films, Italian industrial art schools, the use of glass in architecture, modern art glass, the Reimann School in London, the Royal Designer for Industry, humour for advertising, etc.

 

 

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Industrial Art and Design

 

Decorative Art and Design

 

Architecture

 

Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Textile Design

 

Furniture

 

Sculpture

 

Typography

 

Graphic Design

 

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Title: Jahrbuch Des Deutschen Werkbunde

 

Place of Publication: Munich: Berlin Germany

 

Publisher: Eugen Diederichs / Munich: F. Bruckmann / Berlin: Hermann Reckendorf

 

Frequency: Yearly

 

Period of Publication: 1912-1916/17, 1920

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: The yearbook of the Deutscher Werkbund (DWB) [founded 1907]. Volumes 1-5 of the yearbooks have the subtitle Jahrbuch des Deutschen Werkbundes; the subtitle of volume 6 is Jahrbücher des Deutschen Werkbundes. [There were no yearbooks issued in 1918 and 1919]. Membership of the DWB was open to architects and all active in the fields of design and the applied arts. The yearbooks contain a series of essays on recent developments in German design, followed by approximately 150-200 examples of representative work by members of the DWB. An exception to this format is the 1916-17 edition which was devoted to the design of war memorials and graves.

 

 

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Architecture

 

Interior Design and Decoration

 

Industrial Art and Design

 

Furniture

 

Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Metalwork

 

Lighting

 

Graphic Design

 

Typography

 

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Title: Kunst und Handwerk

 

Place of Publication: München Germany

 

Publisher: Druck und Verlag R. Oldenbourg; and Georg W. Dietrich

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1897-1932

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 47-72, 1898-1922

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: A continuation of Zeitschrift des Bayerischen Kunstgewerbe-Vereins. Contains articles on mainly Bavarian fine and applied art. Covers all periods. Includes articles on Hans Thoma, John Ruskin, ceramics by the Heider pottery, modern poster art, Nikolaus Gysis, the architecture of Emanuel von Seidl, C.R. Ashbee and the Guild of Handicraft, Franz Ringer, Wilhelm Bertsch, etc. NOTE: Initially it will only be possible to browse and make a limited search of this journal as up to 1920 the text uses the black letter (gothic) script. We will be converting the text into modern German script to enable more comprehensive searching

 

 

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Decorative Arts and Design

 

Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Metalwork

 

Textile Design

 

Furnirure

 

Lighting

 

Jewellery

 

Embroidery

 

Stained Glass

 

Available: Now [note: the OCR has not yet been proof-read, however it can be searched]

 

 

 

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Title: Kunstgewerbeblatt

 

Place of Publication: Leipzig Germany

 

Publisher: Verlag von G. A. Seemann

 

Frequency: Yearly

 

Period of Publication: 1885-1917

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-28, 1890-1917

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Kunstgewerbeblatt was a decorative arts journal published in two series - vols.1-5, 1885-1889; and vols. 1-28, 1890-1917.  The focus of the first series, which was printed in the Gothic script, was primarily early and traditional German art. From the second series, the journal was printed in modern German script and the focus shifted to contemporary art, particularly Art Nouveau, and the German interpretation of the Arts and Crafts style. The journal includes well-illustrated articles on ceramics, glass, jewellery, furniture, metalwork, and surface decoration and, to a lesser extent, architecture. The editors of Kunstgewerbeblatt were: Arthur Pabst (October 1885-September 1894); Karl Hoffacker (October 1894-September 1905); and Fritz Hellwag (June 1908-September 1917)

 

 

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Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Metalwork

 

Illustration

 

Surface Decoration

 

Decorative Art and Design

 

 

 

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Title: Nederlandsche-Ambachts-Nijverheids-Kunst

 

Place of Publication: Rotterdam, The Netherlands Netherlands

 

Publisher: W. L. & J. Brusse

 

Frequency: Annual

 

Period of Publication: 1919-1932

 

Period covered by AHR net: 1919-1931

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Title varies [the title of the 1928 edition is Uitzichten en Stroomingen in De Kunstnijverheid Jaarboek van Nederlandsche Ambachts- & Nijverheidskunst]. The yearbook of the Nederlandsche Vereeniging voor Ambachts- en Nijverheidskunst [Dutch Association of Craft and Decorative Arts] (VANK), founded in 1904. The yearbooks are an important source on contemporary Dutch decorative and applied art as most of designers and craftspeople working in the Netherlands at this time were members of VANK. Each issue of the yearbook contain brief reports on recent developments in Dutch design followed by between 70-100 pages of photographs of work by members of VANK, including interiors, furniture, ceramics, glass, jewelry, art metalwork, stained glass, wallpaper design, posters, graphic art, book design and textiles. Artists whose work is featured include Gerrit Rietveld, Willy Sluiter, Jan Toorop H. Th. Wijdeveld, C.A. Lion Cachet, Piet Zwart, Theo van Doesburg, Johan Thorn Prikker, W.H. Gispen, Willem Penaat, H.P. Berlage, etc.

 

 

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Architecture

 

Interior Design and Decoration

 

Furniture

 

Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Textile Design

 

Graphic Design

 

Metalwork

 

Jewellery

 

Jewelry

 

Available: 1919-1928 available now; 1929-1932 available soon

 

 

 

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Title: Our Homes and Gardens

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: Country Life Limited

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1919-1923

 

Period covered by AHR net: 1919-1923

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: In their forward to the first issue of Our Homes and Gardens, the publishers wrote: “There is a widespread demand for a better manner of house design; rooms planned in keeping with present-day needs; furniture that is graceful while at the same time being suitable for everyday use; window hangings and floor coverings that are both serviceable and pleasing to the eye; and last but not least, features belonging to the equipment of the house – such as cooking ranges, sinks, heating apparatus, labour-saving appliances – that will ensure the utmost convenience and economy.  All these things shall find representation in our pages”.  The magazine is extensively illustrated and is an invaluable record of the furnishing of the middle-class British home in the immediate post-World War One years.

 

 

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Architecture

 

Interior Design and Decoration

 

Furniture

 

Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Furnishing Fabrics

 

Carpets and Flooring

 

Wallpaper

 

Domestic Appliances

 

Decorative Art and Design

 

Available: 1921

 

 

 

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Title: Revue Artistique et Industrielle

 

Place of Publication: Bologna, Italy Italy

 

Publisher: Paul Sironi. Paris: Ed. Chjatenay

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1901-1902

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: A short-lived Art Nouveau journal. It appears to have been a spin-off of the Exposition Universelle held in Paris in 1900, and contains a series of richly-illustrated articles by various authors on contemporary French architecture and decorative art. Includes features on the hotel and restaurant interiors, furniture, electric light fittings, stained glass, art metalwork, mural painting, shop window design, wallpaper, pottery, etc. Designers, companies and ateliers whose work is illustrated include Louis Majorelle, ‘Art Nouveau’ Bing, Maison Richard, Emile Gallé, Hector Guimard, Paul Bec, Louis Feelix Bigaux, Maison Millet, etc

 

 

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Architecture

 

Interior Design and Decoration

 

Furniture

 

Decorative Art and Design

 

Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Metalwork

 

Lighting

 

Textile Design

 

Jewellery

 

 

 

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Title: The Studio

 

Place of Publication: London England

 

Publisher: The Studio Ltd.

 

Frequency: Monthly

 

Period of Publication: 1893-1964

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-84, 1893-1922

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: The Studio was one of the most respected and influential art journals published in Britain. It was international in its coverage, and contained, long, often well-illustrated articles on all aspects of the decorative, fine and applied arts. It included contributions from many of the leading art critics of the day, e.g. Aymer Vallance, Fernand Knopff and A. Lys Baldry. Each issue of The Studio also contained a round-up of the latest art news, reports on recent exhibitions, and book reviews. The Studio played an important role in promoting trends and developments in contemporary art and was largely responsible for establishing the reputations of many artists notably Aubrey Beardsley, James McNeill Whistler, and the artists of the Glasgow School.

 

 

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Architecture

 

Interior Design and Decoration

 

Furniture

 

Ceramics

 

Glass

 

Jewellery

 

Metalwork

 

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Title: The Studio Yearbook of Decorative Art

 

Place of Publication: London; New York, NY England; USA

 

Publisher: The Studio [etc.], 1906-1925 [renamed Decorative Art in 1926]

 

Frequency: Annual

 

Period of Publication: 1906-1980

 

Period covered by AHR net: Volumes 1-17, 1906-1922

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: The Studio Yearbook of Decorative Art was published by the London and New York offices of The Studio magazine in London and New York from 1906. The years digitized by Arts-search are 1906-1922. The Studio Yearbook was an annual review of some of the finest examples of contemporary architecture and applied art. Among the architects, designers and companies whose work feature in these issues are C.R. Ashbee, M.H. Baillie Scott, Liberty & Co., the Guild of Handicraft, Heal & Son, Ambrose Heal, Ernest Gimson, Edwin Lutyens, C.F.A. Voysey, the Scottish Guild of Handicraft, Jessie M. King, William Morris & Co., Arthur Sanderson & Sons, Ann Macbeth, Mintons Ltd., Doulton & Co., Walter Crane, Frank Brangwyn, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, George Walton, Heywood Sumner, Peter Behrens, Josef Urban, Josef Hoffmann, Parker & Unwin, the Deutsche Werkstätten, the Wiener Wekstätten, Richard Riemerschmid, Louis Majorelle, Murice Dufrène, Henry Holiday, Koloman Moser, W.A.S. Benson, Alexander Fisher, René Lalique, Ernestine Mills, Hermann Muthesius, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Michael Powolny, Jacques Ruhlmann, Otto Prutscher, Carl Czeschka, Rookwood Pottery, Gio Ponti, Carl Malmsten, Gunnar Asplund, Edward Hald, Wilhelm Kåge, Simon Gate, Orrefors Glasbruk, Sue et Mare, Bing & Grøndahl, Georg Jensen, etc.

 

 

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Decorative Art and Design

 

Available: 1906-1922 available now; 1923-1930 available soon

 

 

 

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Title: Trend in Design of Everyday Things vol. 1, no. 1, Spring 1936

 

Place of Publication: London

 

Publisher: Trend Publications Ltd.

 

Period of Publication: 1936

 

Type of Publication: Journal

 

Description: Trend in Design of Everyday Things [cover title Trend in Design] was the official quarterly of the Design and Industries Association (DIA). It was short-lived, running to only to issues, and is therefore little-known. Contributors included Nikolaus Pevsner on the British pottery industry; Noel Carrington on the history of the DIA; and Elizabeth Denby on the Exhibition of Everyday Art at the Royal Institute of British Architects. Also includes articles on the restyling of Sears Roebuck's "Coldspot" refrigerator by Raymond Loewy, and on wood and metal bookshelves designed by Gropius-Pritchard. Notable among the companies that advertised in the magazine were Isokon, Gordon Russell Ltd., Heal's, and Duncan Miller.

 

 

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Decorative Art and Design

 

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