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Lalique, René

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
(rӘnā' lälēk'), 1860–1945, French jewelery designer and glassmaker whose works are landmarks of arts nouveau and deco, b. Ay; apprenticed to Parisian goldsmith Louis Aucoq at 16; studied école des Arts Décoratifs, Paris (1876–78), Sydenham College, London (1878–80). He set up his own Parisian jewelry studio in 1885, producing sinuously luxurious art nouveau pendants, bracelets, brooches, combs, and other objects of adornment. Lalique often portrayed the female face and form as well as animal and floral motifs, frequently juxtaposing such materials as gold and silver, precious and semiprecious stones, enamel, ivory, and glass. During the 1890s his work became fashionable among the Parisian elite. In 1907 an interest in glass led him to begin mass-producing elegant molded perfume bottles, which have since become design classics, and in 1921 he founded the Alsace factory that still produces Lalique crystal. He molded (and sometimes pressed) glass, often etched or ornamented in raised…
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Full text Article Lalique, René

From Philip's Encyclopedia
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Full text Article Lalique, René (Jules)

From Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
Enamel, glass, and topaz hair ornament and brooch...
(born April 6, 1860, Ay, Fr.—died May 5, 1945, Paris) French jeweler and glassmaker. Trained in Paris and London, he opened his own firm in Paris in 1885 and soon acquired clients such as Sarah Bernhardt . Reacting against machine-produced jewelry featuring precious gems, he designed elegant and…
| 177 words , 1 image
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Full text Article Lalique

From The Macquarie Dictionary
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Full text Article Lalique

From Collins English Dictionary
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Full text Article Arts and Crafts movement

From Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
An English room decorated by William Morris in...
English social and aesthetic movement of the second half of the 19th century, dedicated to reestablishing the importance of craftsmanship in an era of mechanization and mass production. The name derives from the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society (1888). Inspired by John Ruskin and other writers who…
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In the late 19th century there was a reaction in artistic circles to the low quality of mass-produced jewellery and the ostentatious use of expensive materials such as diamonds. Artists throughout Europe and the USA attempted to re-establish the traditions of fine craftsmanship, often - as in…
| 1,347 words
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Full text Article Gallé, Émile

From Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
Vase with relief decoration by Émile Gallé, c....
(born May 8, 1846, Nancy, Fr.—died Sept. 23, 1904, Nancy) French glass and furniture designer. From 1867 he worked in his father’s faience and furniture factory in Nancy. His deeply coloured opaque pieces, layered and carved or etched with plant motifs, were a great success at the Paris Exhibitions…
| 177 words , 1 image
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Full text Article art nouveau

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
(är´´ nōvō'), decorative-art movement centered in Western Europe. It began in the 1880s as a reaction against the historical emphasis of mid-19th-century art, but did not survive World War I. Art nouveau originated in London and was variously called Jugendstil in Germany, Sezessionstil in Austria, …
| 287 words
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Full text Article Lalique, René

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
(rӘnā' lälēk'), 1860–1945, French jewelery designer and glassmaker whose works are landmarks of arts nouveau and deco, b. Ay; apprenticed to Parisian goldsmith Louis Aucoq at 16; studied école des Arts Décoratifs, Paris (1876–78), Sydenham College, London (1878–80). He set up his own Parisian…
| 259 words
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Full text Article jewellery

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
Objects worn for ornament, such as rings, brooches, necklaces, pendants, earrings, and bracelets. Jewellery has been made from a wide variety of materials, including precious metals, gemstones, amber, teeth, bone, glass, and plastics. history of Western jewellery 3rd millennium BC Babylonian styles…
| 539 words
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