Film Categories
Art Periods
- 1.Early Cultures
- 2.First Civilizations
- 3.Africa
- 4.Pre-Columbian America
- 5.Romanesque and Gothic
- 6.Renaissance and Mannerism
- 7.Northern Renaissance
- 8.Rembrandt
- 9.Baroque and Rococo
- 10. Neo-classicists and Romantics
- 11. The Victorians
- 12. Impressionists and Post-Impressionists
- 13. Art Nouveau
- 14. Expressionism
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- 16. Into Abstraction
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- 18. Dada and Surrealism
- 19. Modern Masters
- 20. Modern and Contemporary Sculptors
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Films to Buy
- Burning with Life*
- The Enlightened Bourgeois*
- Art Nouveau*
- Final Vortex*
- Art Nouveau: Equivoque 1900
- Modernism in Barcelona
- Modernist Architecture in Barcelona
- Vienna 1900*
- Charles Rennie Mackintosh*
- The Fall and Rise of Mackintosh
- Hectorologie
- Movable Steel Bridges
- Theo van Doesburg*
- The Rietveld Schröder House*
- El Lissitzky*
- The Bauhaus
- The Man with Modern Nerves
- The Flame of Functionalism
- Scandinavian Design: The Lunning Prize 1951-70
- Chichester Theological College
- Public sector Housing in Amsterdam 1900-91*
- Alvar Aalto
- Homage to Humanity
- Larsen - Light - Now
- Jim Stirling's Architecture*
- An Affirmation of Life
- The Seasons
- Dreams Come True
- New Horizons
- Visions of Future Living
- Master of Glass
Art Nouveau
60 minutes, color, age range: 15 - adult, #458

Restaurant scene
Fin-de-siècle Paris: the Mecca of Art Nouveau. The great 'world exhibitions' of the last decades of the nineteenth century had popularized a series of exceptional new scientific achievements which, via Paris, had spread their fame all over the world. A thousand novelties put an end for ever to the old traditional way of life, replacing it with a totally new technological reality and a new attitude to life, unmistakable in its style. Art Nouveau is not a uniform, codified phenomenon but a rich and varied brew, exemplified by a whole list of different personalities from Eiffel to Debussy, from Toulouse-Lautrec, Gauguin, Gallé and Guimard right up to Lalique - to say nothing of the 'newcomers' like Mucha, from Prague, Bakst, with his Russian ballets or Boldini, with his portraits. It was certainly a great age, a great 'epoch'; but it faded quickly.
Part of the series La Grande Epoque
Credits
Director/Writer: Folco Quilici
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