This is Revival.
Inspired by Art Nouveau’s most iconic pieces and influential artists, the Revival collection highlights a modern restoration of what’s been made new so many times before. Like Art Nouveau, this collection nods to an era of technology, folklore, architecture, flora, fauna and fairy tale.
Yielding to both science and mysticism, the use of lines became a basis for decorative schemes. Inspired by a similar, hair-like, sinuous line, Revival contains jacquard patterns whose intricate looms and linear motions curve back on themselves, creating a tense whiplash of energy. To settle this fury, the distressed cut velvets feel the way a Claude Debussy song sounds, luscious and inviting. A hint of shell; a cluster of root — nature runs through the vein of this collection. It could stand for innocence, luxury, or even the collective thinking of the era.
ATHENA SCALLOP
Coming in at the tail end of Art Nouveau, artist Erté became most famous for his elegant fashion designs which would later encapsulate the era in which he worked.
The linework of Erté’s illustration Athena is at once delicate and structured. Athena stands proudly, holding her fan like a staff; her headdress beams from the crown of her head like rays of light. Inspired by the sinuous lines and broad loops of Athena, Athena Scallop’s arced design expands across a clean cotton linen jacquard.
DADA STRIPE
Toward the end of the Art Nouveau era, Art Deco and “Anti-art” were coming into vogue. The roots of Dadaism took hold. Artists, angry with the modern capitalist society, wanted to destroy the deceptions of logic, reason, and beauty.
Digitally printed with curved stripes, this lightweight linen sateen called Dada Stripe has one foot in the Art Nouveau party while stepping into a new society. This airy fabric is anti-bourgeois in attitude, but luxurious in quality.
VINTAGE PEACOCK
Beauty in the animal kingdom is not mere decoration — it’s a code. Ornamentation on animals evolved to illustrate their health and vitality. Watching a peacock expand is a force of nature, and the artists of Art Nouveau sought to bring this organic power back into public spaces.
The undeniable impact of Vintage Peacock, a multi-colored embroidery on cotton linen blend, resounds. Giving a nod to Art Nouveau’s mission, to praise nature not with logic but with “bio-logic.” The embroidered feather design of Vintage Peacock uses exaggerated shapes and sizes to show the balance between beauty and power.
SCHIELE SILK
Prodigy of Gustav Klimt, the Austrian painter Egon Schiele also spent his career focusing on the female figure. Schiele put his mark on the art world using his pen and paintbrush to express themes of discovery, sex, and death with a frenetic line. In 1912, Schiele was even imprisoned for his unconventional portrayals of young women.
Schiele Silk, our dramatic embroidered floral, on a spray-dyed silk ground, has the energy of Schiele’s lines, and the sensual curves of the female forms he was drawn to. We imagine one of Schiele’s models draping herself in this rich print and sitting down in front of the artist as he sketches her.
The embroidered flower, leaning against a striking set of vertical lines, makes a gesture to Art Nouveau and adds sophistication to any affair.
“Art is a line around your thoughts.” - Oscar Wilde
LIBERTY BONE
Off the beaten track in Tuscany, where the hills bend for miles, are traces of Italy’s take on Art Nouveau. Part Celtic ornament, part Japanese chic, the “Liberty Style” praised light.
The expansive lines of this architectural style inspired pattern Liberty Bone. Adding a modern twist to the iconic herringbone pattern, this embroidery on pale cotton sateen mimics the way early afternoon light floods into the windows of the Piazza.
FOR ARTS SAKE
Emphasizing the grotesque, the decadent, and the erotic, the famed English illustrator Aubrey Beardsley was heavily influenced by Japanese woodcuttings. Using ink as his medium, Beardsley created highly ornate illustrations focused primarily on the female form and historical narratives. Of his most famous illustrations, Salomé depicts a bubbling skyline and a decadent embrace.
One of our favorite pieces of the Revival collection, For Arts Sake demands attention. Resembling Beardsley’s iconic skyline, this spray dyed velvet print’s scalloped design fits in perfectly with the Decadent Movement – an era defined by “art for art’s sake.”
POEM FROM JAPAN
Weaving together west and east, pattern Poem from Japan is as unique as the threads that connect Art Nouveau's Japonism movement. Woven in Japan using Japanese paper and polyester fibers, this fabric layers large black and white looms, giving a strong interplay between light and language.
ALPHONSE
Art Nouveau’s goal of reconnecting audiences with the organic world was a response to the mass production of the 19th century. Painter Alphonse Mucha’s artisanal craftsmanship was at the forefront of this intention, with his use of female symbolism and a passion for the dramatically decorative.
Alphonse, a digitally printed nature scene, positions florals atop a clean canvas and weaves them into an epic graphic statement.
LOVELETTER
In order to beautify the messages advertised in theatre posters, book covers and pamphlets of the era, artists praised embellishments. The movement was emotional and artists took every opportunity to incorporate romance into their messages.
Loveletter plays on this coupling of graphic design and romance, mimicing a blank piece of parchment. The dashed, jacquard embroidery adds the dynamic ornamentation artists of the era most admired.
HEYGATE
Wanting to break from his Renaissance influence, Arts and Crafts designer Arthur Heygate Mackmurdo looked past the shores of Italy and focused his attention to a breaking wave. The rhythm and movement of plant tendrils created what would become an essential concept of Art Nouveau design.
Heygate’s foil printed velvet pattern mimics the movement pulsing through Art Nouveau. Metallic and moody, the decorative flourishes are indeed akin to the angle of which plants weave through water at dusk.
NOUVEAU STRIE VELVET
Gustav Klimt, on of the leading painters of Art Nouveau, obsessed over the symbolism of the female form. Figures were allegories and flowers were erotic.
A thick cut velvet épinglé inspired by Klimt’s geometric florals and long lines that alter the perception of space, Nouveau Strie Velvet expands lusciously through the room.