This section contains 694 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |
1865-1950
Interior Decorator
Professional Design.
Elsie de Wolfe was the first professional interior designer in America. Before de Wolfe began helping her friends with home decoration around 1900, American homes had never been "designed." Upper-class women called in curtain makers, furniture salesmen, wallpaper specialists, and other craftsmen and then attempted to arrange these elements themselves. De Wolfe, who believed in achieving a single, harmonious, overall design statement, felt that the decoration of the home should reflect the woman's personality, rather than simply the husband's earning power. She introduced a startling freshness to the elaborate, heavily fringed and tasseled Victorian design sensibility of her time. While carrying on the tradition of decorative surfaces and harmonious color combinations, she cleared away the thickly curtained and upholstered look of the nineteenth century. Having spent summers in France, she had come to prefer the light, gilded interiors of Versailles and...
This section contains 694 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |