Formes et Couleurs, Planche 12
Designed by Auguste H. Thomas French
Published by Albert Lévy, Librairie Centrale des Beaux-Arts
Not on view
Twelfth plate of pochoir pattern book with loose leaves titled "Formes et Couleurs: Vingt Planches en Couleurs Contenant Soixante-sept Motifs Décoratifs" (Forms and Colors: Twenty Colored Plates Containing Sixty-Seven Decorative Motifs), designed by Auguste H. Thomas and edited by Albert Lévy, published in Paris by Librairie Centrale des Beaux-Arts around 1930. The album is composed of one title page and 20 plates with several designs, numbered 1-20. The plates are stored inside a reconstructed black portfolio with title pochoir label on the front cover. The designs in the album are possibly for textiles and contain a variety of geometric motifs, birds and flowers, all typical of the Art Deco style, which was characterized by its eclecticism, drawing from a variety of sources that sought to combine old European design traditions with the modern style diffused by avant-garde art, while also reflecting the romantic fascination with early Egyptian and Meso-American "exotic" cultures promoted by archaeological discoveries of the times.
The plate consists of two designs with semi-abstract motifs with flowers, leaves, and birds. The first design is made up of a large semi-abstract bird with orange feathers, flying in front of semi-abstract clouds colored with light blue and outlined with pink, surrounded by semi-abstract rosettes, colored with pink, and stems with leaves, colored with dark blue, over a gray ground. The second design is made up of bundles of large, stylized leaves, colored with green, blue and purple, over a ground colored with dark greenish-blue with white and purple dots.