Sterne, Federn, Quasten/Stars, Feathers, Tassels

Die Wiener-Werkstätte-Künstlerin Felice Rix-Ueno (1893-1967)/The Wiener Werkstätte Artist Felice Rix-Ueno (1893-1967), Dt/engl

MAK/Lilli Hollein/Anne-Katrin Rossberg

192 Seiten, 40 s/w Illustr., 119 farbige Illustr., 40 b/w and 119 col. ill.

39,00 €
Inkl. 7% Steuern

Lieferzeit: 5 Werktage(inkl . Versand)

Felice Rix-Ueno studied under Josef Hoffmann, a co-founder of the Wiener Werkstätte (1903-1932). Inspired by the Japanese formal language, she formed her own style, which was expressed in particularly imaginative fabric and wallpaper patterns, fashion and home accessories, and wall paintings. After her marriage to the Japanese architect Isaburo Ueno, she moved to Japan in 1926. There they created joint works that received much attention, such as the Star Bar in Kyoto, which was shown in the famous exhibition Modern Architecture in New Yorks MoMa in 1932. Felice Rix-Ueno, who was already prominently represented in the successful MAK exhibition Women Artists of the Wiener Werkstätte, is given a substantial monographic treatment for the first time outside Japan with this catalog.

Lilli Hollein, Anne-Katrin Rossberg, MAK - Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna.

Mehr Informationen
Autor MAK/Lilli Hollein/Anne-Katrin Rossberg
Verlag Birkhäuser
ISBN 9783035628401
ISBN/EAN 9783035628401
Lieferzeit 5 Werktage(inkl . Versand)
Erscheinungsdatum 03.08.2023
Lieferbarkeitsdatum 18.12.2023
Einband Paperback
Format 2 x 24 x 17
Seitenzahl 192 S., 40 s/w Illustr., 119 farbige Illustr., 40 b/w and 119 col. ill.
Gewicht 513

Weitere Informationen

Mehr Informationen
Verlag Birkhäuser
ISBN 9783035628401
Erscheinungsdatum 03.08.2023
Einband Paperback
Format 2 x 24 x 17
Gewicht 513

Felice Rix-Ueno studied under Josef Hoffmann, a co-founder of the Wiener Werkstätte (1903-1932). Inspired by the Japanese formal language, she formed her own style, which was expressed in particularly imaginative fabric and wallpaper patterns, fashion and home accessories, and wall paintings. After her marriage to the Japanese architect Isaburo Ueno, she moved to Japan in 1926. There they created joint works that received much attention, such as the Star Bar in Kyoto, which was shown in the famous exhibition Modern Architecture in New Yorks MoMa in 1932. Felice Rix-Ueno, who was already prominently represented in the successful MAK exhibition Women Artists of the Wiener Werkstätte, is given a substantial monographic treatment for the first time outside Japan with this catalog.

Lilli Hollein, Anne-Katrin Rossberg, MAK - Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna.

 

Kategorie