Nothing to see here
I Love Art Deco!

I don't know why this should be, really. Art Deco has nothing either Gothic or Christian about it. It's the last great artistic style that had both
panache and a sense of optimism and confidence about it. You can look at
factories, for heaven's sake, built in the 1930s in Britain, and it's quite
clear they were constructed with no thought that the building might ever be used for anything other than making the products of one particular firm,
whose name and business are built into the decoration and fabric. The future is sure and we can rely on it. Ah, what conviction! Perhaps that's why
I like it - the clarity and
futurity are so excitingly at odds with my own temper.
My own home corner of the world, Bournemouth and Poole in Dorset, abound in humble examples of Art Deco architecture. I've become quite
interested in how the international Art Deco style trickled down to an unimportant part of Britain - though, admittedly, I haven't actually found out
much about that. What I have done is take photos of Art Deco buildings in the area, and here, for your viewing pleasure, are what I think are ten of
the nicest.

Click on the little Deco flashes on the map to open each picture.
Conning Tower Hotel
Sandbanks Road houses
59 Banks Road, Sandbanks
Pendennis Hotel, Eastcliff
Bennetts, Poole High Street
Motabitz, Christchurch Road
Southbourne URC Church
Castle Lane houses
Bliss bar, Bournemouth
Dingles, Bournemouth
Deco in Church?
Bringing together two areas of this site, I recently stumbled across this rather striking set of gold and red Roman-style vestments on eBay (not
that I regularly go searching for chasubles to drool over, of course); the photos show a maniple, but unfortunately no stole. In their rather
dramatic simplicity, I can't imagine that they can have been made in any other era than the 1930s, and remind me rather of the style of certain
churches such as
St Alban's in Cowley, Oxford. I've yet to notice any items of ecclesiastical dress that are more, well, Decorative, but will keep
an eye out. I decided I didn't really need to buy these, nevertheless!
back of the chasy
front of the chasy
maniple
More Bournemouth Deco - click here.
Surbiton Station
Surbiton Station clocktower
Surbiton Station from the platform
Surbiton Station concourse
Surbiton Station, October 2008
I often go through Surbiton Station on the way to London, and had been struck by its clean streamlined moderne lines and Deco touches. I finally
managed to organise a visit and look at it. Getting out at the station, my first thought was 'Er ...', and wondering whether I could reclaim the ticket on
the argument that I was temporarily insane while buying it. But a more detailed examination revealed a very remarkable building, constructed in 1937 on
the site of an earlier station.
It really is rather striking, and I saw it to its best advantage against a chilly blue sky. I
do think the clock tower has a remarkable look of a medieval city somewhere in
Tuscany. The powers-that-be have decided to keep the lettering inside and outside the
station looking very appropriate. Surbiton seems to regard the station as the best
building in the town, and is probably right.
Art Deco in Dorset
Deco Frontpage
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