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The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts 23
Florida Theme Issue
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Edited by Beth Dunlop
MIT Press
Due/Published
April 2002, 381 pages,
paper
ISBN
0963160184
The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts, founded in 1986 and now published by The Wolfsonian-Florida International University, explores themes relating to The Wolfsonian collection and to the visual language of objects. It conveys to readers the power of design and shows how design shapes and reflects human values and experience. What is Florida? Where does its image come from, and what is involved in the selling of that image? The myths and realities of Florida unfold in these seventeen essays documenting the history and culture of the Sunshine State from 1875 to 1945. Since the time of Ponce de Leon, who sought the fountain of youth there, explorers, entrepreneurs, inventors, and visionaries have viewed Florida as a place where dreams come true. FloridaÕs restorative powers were perhaps best expressed through the orange, which, though not native to the state, seduced myriad investors and served as a promotional icon. No other state mastered the art of propaganda--the ability to invent and promote itself--so well. Networks of trains, ships, and luxury hotels spawned a real estate boom and, with it, a distinctive architecture as fanciful as Araby, as classical as Mediterranean, and as enlightened as Modernist. Contributors: Margot Ammidown, Margaret Bing, Seth Bramson, William E. Brown, Jr., Michael Carlebach, Beth Dunlop, Dorothy Jenkins Fields, James Findlay, Thomas Graham, Joel Hoffman, Michael Kinerk, Helen Kohen, Joanna Lombard, Thomas Low, Catherine Lynn, Michael McDonough, Allan Shulman, John Stuart, Dennis Wilhelm. |
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