As my first "Friday Feature", I thought who more appropriate to showcase than the woman who began it all?
Dorothy Draper was born to an extremely wealthy family in 1889 and was the first to “professionalize” the
interior design industry. In 1923 she began the first ever interior
design company in the United States, something that until then was
unheard of, not to mention a woman going into business for herself.
She revolutionized the concept of
“design” by breaking away from the historical “period room” styles that
dominated the work of her predecessors. As an artist
she was a modern, one of the first decorators of the breed, and a
pioneer. She invented “Modern Baroque”, a style that had particular
application to large public spaces and modern architecture.
She used vibrant, “splashy” colors in never-before-seen combinations,
such as aubergine and pink with a “splash” of chartreuse and a touch of
turquoise blue, or, one of her favorite combinations - “dull” white and
“shiny” black. Her signature “cabbage rose” chintz, paired with bold
stripes; her elaborate and ornate plaster designs and moldings - over
doors, on walls and ceilings; her black and white checkered floors (The
Quitandinah Palace & Casino Resort, Petropolis, Brazil); her
massive, paneled, lacquered doors (Arrowhead Springs Hotel, California),
some framed with bolection (Hampshire House, New York) or with
elaborate plaster or intricate mirror frames (Camellia House, Drake
Hotel, Chicago) – all contributed to dramatic design often referred to
as “the Draper touch”.
Her confidence, as much as her taste, gave
her the ability to take control in all aspects of
design – her slogan was “if it looks right, it is right”.
In her day, Dorothy was the prima donna of
the decorating business – her name was synonymous with decorating. She
gave decorating advice in her regular column for Good Housekeeping
Magazine, designed fabric lines for Schumacher, furniture for Ficks
Reed, Heritage and, other than her hotel and restaurant decors, she also
designed theaters, department stores, commercial establishments,
private corporate offices, the interiors of jet planes (Convair &
TWA) , automobiles (she did a “line” for Packard and Chrysler in the
1950’s – including a pink polka dot truck!) – even packaging for the
cosmetics firm of Dorothy Gray – on top of her residential designs for
the houses and apartments of prominent and very wealthy society figures.
The year 2006 was a milestone in the
American interior design industry - for it was in that year that the
legendary Dorothy Draper, a doyenne of the interior design industry of
the 20th Century, was honored in a retrospective exhibition of her work
by the Museum of the City of New York – the first time that such an
honor was given to an interior designer. It was enormously successful,
and it is estimated that more than 300,000 people attended over a period
of six months. The exhibit continued to the Woman’s Museum in Fair Park
(Dallas, Texas) where again it spurred much interest. In February 2008
it will continue on to the Museum of Art in Fort Lauderdale, Florida –
such is the interest of this phenomenal giant in the design industry.
sourceNow to the fun part, samples of her gorgeous and timeless work!
What's your favorite Dorothy Draper project?
~Laura
Can't choose a favorite - I love them all! We have so much to thank her for.
ReplyDeleteThey are all stunning. So nice to meet you just found your beautiful blog and so happy I did. I have enjoyed looking around and I'm now following you, wonderful to meet new friends. Hope you find a spare minute to visit and follow me sometime if you like. Sending you special wishes for a wonderful New Year I’m looking forward to keeping in touch in 2012.
ReplyDeleteAlways Wendy
o man...the first image...the floor! L.O.V.E.!
ReplyDeleteVery dramatic and striking design works. Fabulous!
ReplyDeleteXoxo
Karena
Art by Karena