Designs For Health And Beauty
Country Life UK
|March 04, 2020
The coming of mass tourism to the seaside produced an era of iconic Modern architecture and design, as Clive Aslet discovers
Does anyone still have a beach cape? If so, Ghislaine Wood, curator of the Sainsbury Centre’s new exhibition, would like to hear from you. Beach capes—voluminous, tent-like robes that allowed the (female) wearer to change into a swimsuit without any loss of modesty—were an essential accessory of the 1930s seaside.
Brightly coloured and strikingly patterned, these once ubiquitous garments seem to have been thrown out, together with the knitted bathing dresses over which they were worn, once fashion changed. Elaborate evening dresses had a more obvious value; the exhibition contains some sleek and shimmering examples borrowed from Southend Museums. (One of the aims of the show has been to draw on out-of-London collections.)
Architecturally, Art Deco found a natural home at the seaside. Bold, eye-catching and cheap to build, it was particularly suited to cinemas, lidos and hotels. There were some masterpieces, such as Oliver Hill’s Midland Hotel in Morecambe, Serge Chermayeff and Erich Mendelsohn’s De La Warr Pavilion at Bexhill-on-Sea and Joseph Emberton’s Blackpool Pleasure Beach—not that the architects would have seen themselves as working in the Art Deco style, as the term was only coined in the 1960s. Billy Butlin’s first holiday camps (Skegness, 1936; Clacton, 1938) used the style to catch the eye of the middle classes.
Esta historia es de la edición March 04, 2020 de Country Life UK.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Country Life UK
Country Life UK
Fifty shades of tartan
Rupert Campbell-Black rides again as the Duke of Inchtyra, impoverished laird of rock and bog'
2 mins
December 10, 2025 ( Double Issue )
Country Life UK
The lion's share
As C. S. Lewis's enchanting children's classic The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe turns 75, Matthew Dennison pulls back the coats to explore its evergreen spell
6 mins
December 10, 2025 ( Double Issue )
Country Life UK
Very fetching
How might Hermès dress a corgi? What unites a dalmatian and Dior? Agnes Stamp meets the haute dogs
1 mins
December 10, 2025 ( Double Issue )
Country Life UK
Green and pleasant band
Rarer than diamonds and more valuable than any other coloured jewels, a fine emerald represents natural beauty at its most beguiling. Jonathan Self journeys into the lustrous world of this revered gemstone
5 mins
December 10, 2025 ( Double Issue )
Country Life UK
We make Christmas happen
This time of year represents big business—and exhaustion—for the producers of festive fare, from crackers to hellebores to ham. Jane Wheatley visits six stalwarts who are flat out right now
8 mins
December 10, 2025 ( Double Issue )
Country Life UK
Wholly smoke
There's a world of difference between mass-market smoked salmon and the traditionally produced kind, as Tom Howells discovers on a trip to London's Secret Smokehouse
3 mins
December 10, 2025 ( Double Issue )
Country Life UK
Merry Christmas, Peter Rabbit!
As Unitarians, the Potter family's festive season was an abstemious time—something the young Beatrix railed against, joyfully, into her adult life and within her beloved children's books
5 mins
December 10, 2025 ( Double Issue )
Country Life UK
Rubies for Christmas
Its twinkling seeds bejewel festive feasts, but there's much more to the pomegranate than meets the eye
5 mins
December 10, 2025 ( Double Issue )
Country Life UK
And so this is Christmas
Whether it's a rosy-cheeked girl wrapped up warm, sun-bathed sheep at twilight or a snow-blanketed apple orchard, myriad pictures sum up the festive season, as 16 friends of COUNTRY LIFE tell Carla Passino
12 mins
December 10, 2025 ( Double Issue )
Country Life UK
My favourite painting Dame Sarah Mullally
Virtues of Unity by Halima Cassell
1 min
December 10, 2025 ( Double Issue )
Translate
Change font size

