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Designs for Living

Episode 2 of 5

In the 1920s and 30s, with the world at the tipping point between two global wars, design suggested dramatically different ideas about the shape of things to come.

In the crisis-stricken decades of the 1920s and 1930s, with the world at the tipping point between two global wars, design suggested dramatically different ideas about the shape of things to come, from the radical futurism of the Bauhaus to the British love affair with mock-Tudor architecture and the three-piece suite.

In Europe, the 'modern movement' promoted the virtues of the machine and the machine-made with theories and products like open-plan living, the fitted kitchen and tubular steel furniture which have become absorbed into the mainstream of the designed world. In the USA, designers like Raymond Loewy and Henry Dreyfuss explored and exploited the dreams and desires of American consumers to develop a market-based approach to design which has become one of the bedrocks of the modern consumer society. Featuring Niels Diffrient and Tom Dyckhoff.

1 hour

Last on

Wed 30 Jun 201023:45

Credits

RoleContributor
NarratorDenis Lawson
ProducerHattie Bowering

Broadcasts

  • Fri 14 May 201019:00
  • Sat 15 May 201019:30
  • Mon 24 May 201019:00
  • Tue 29 Jun 201000:25
  • Wed 30 Jun 201023:45