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Art Deco Rugs:
 
 
Style: Minimalist
Style2: Geometric
Predominant Color: beige Predominant Color: beige

Art Deco owes its name to the first major exhibition of decorative arts to be held after the First World War: L'Exposition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes held in Paris in 1925. The supreme elegance of the custom made interiors at the event set an example for interior designers the world over. Inspired by these innovative aesthetic ideas, artists, designers, craftsmen and manufacturers from across Europe and America produced a wide range of modern pioneering patterns that delivered a dramatic change of style to furnishings in general, and early 20th century rugs and carpets in particular. Decorative arts of this period, sometimes known as the Machine Age, are characterized by a streamlined appearance. Art Deco rugs and carpets woven from the mid-1920s through the 1930s reflect this style. Two groundbreaking French designers, Jean Michel Frank and Emile Jacques Ruhlmann may be credited with some of the most creative Art Deco carpets and rugs of the age.

An Art Deco rug BB4611

Circa: 1950
 
A rug designed by Victor Vasarely, the beige field with ivory stepped horizontal stripes that become narrower nearer to the edge.  Victor Vasarely (1908-1997) was a Hungarian French artist who is considered to be the father of Op-art.  The present rug exemplifies his penchant for simple color schemes and geometric and minimalist abstract patterns.

Watch full size video of An Art Deco rug, Circa 1950, ID BB4611 - Video

 
Size:  11'5" × 11'
Item No:  BB4611