ART IN FASHION - Silk Artists Squares from 1947

ART IN FASHION - Silk Artists Squares from 1947

6 Duke Street London, SWIY 6BN, United Kingdom Tuesday, April 24, 2012–Friday, May 18, 2012

la mer by alexander calder

Alexander Calder

La Mer, 1946

Price on Request

the lovers - boy and girl by andré derain

André Derain

The Lovers - Boy and Girl, 1947

Price on Request

landscape sculpture by barbara hepworth

Barbara Hepworth

Landscape Sculpture, 1947

Price on Request

The Aschers' work in textiles and art represent the postwar ambition to do something different, something avant-garde. Their vision was to promote optimism in a postwar society that was often dreary and depressing. The concept of the Ascher Squares--of collaboration between artist and designer, of freedom within an industry that had always been highly structured--was new. No instruction was given, no restriction placed upon creativity. "Make art" was the request, "let inspiration be the guide." The artists so employed represented a cross-section of Europe itself. They were English, Spanish, Greek, Russian, American, French in a sense, the Ascher Square is both a representation of postwar liberation and the state of art in the whole of Europe at the time.