Intentar ORO - Gratis
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
London Life
Your indispensable guide to the capital
2 mins
May 06, 2026
Country Life UK
Business or pleasure?
As the Festival of Britain turns 75, Kathryn Ferry looks back on the pleasure gardens at Battersea in London that may have been the last of their kind
5 mins
May 06, 2026
Country Life UK
China girl
A summer spell in Jingdezhen, once the world's porcelain capital, led Felicity Aylieff to put her twist on Chinese techniques and make ceramics on a monumental scale
5 mins
May 06, 2026
Country Life UK
Blood relations
This was the ritual fate every Highland bridegroom hopes he might somehow elude'
2 mins
May 06, 2026
Country Life UK
Drawn to the natural world
She may have dwelt in Beatrix Potter's shadow, but Alison Uttley's magical, arcadian world is a prevailing pleasure to explore
3 mins
May 06, 2026
Country Life UK
Record UK wildfires spur launch of commission
A RECORD number of wildfires was reported in Britain last year, the devastation in part fuelled by the Carrbridge and Dava Moor wildfire at Strathspey—the worst in Scotland's history—which saw 11,827ha (29,225 acres) of moorland and woodland devastated.
1 min
May 06, 2026
Country Life UK
My favourite painting Karl Openshaw
KEN-KUROJIRO is the professional name of Chinese artist Ren Qian.
1 min
May 06, 2026
Country Life UK
From cattle byre to elegant bower
The garden of Hodges Barn, Gloucestershire The home of Nick and Amanda Hornby
5 mins
May 06, 2026
Country Life UK
Right up your alley
The game of boules was unfairly maligned by Henry VIII for inducing the deplorable state of English archery, but, in its modern incarnation, it continues to thrive in Britain,
5 mins
May 06, 2026
Country Life UK
Dark magic
Gentleman's Relish, savoury staple of the Victorian pantry and top-notch teatime treat, looks set to be discontinued. Tom Parker Bowles salutes it-and suggests an alternative
3 mins
May 06, 2026
Translate
Change font size
