Conventional accounts of Modernism, especially in architecture and town planning, create the erroneous impression that minimalist, history-rejecting, theory-driven and self-referential tendencies were what it was all about between the wars. There was another side, however, to what architectural critic Osbert Lancaster pithily termed âBauhaus ballsâ, set in aspic as âThe International Styleâ by the Museum of Modern Art, New York and enshrined in Nikolaus Pevsnerâs outrageously biased âgrand narrativesâ. That side was eclectic (embracing not only popular culture, but also the absurd and surreal), and drew on half-invented history, creating an unhistoricist evocation of the past: this was high camp, light-hearted and amusing.
So-called âfunctionalismâ was very much a minority obsession, for the vast majority of British people refused to succumb to its limited charms. They did not want a âmachine for livingâ so much as a place where they could be comfortable and create their own familiar, pleasant spaces. There was an obvious reason why International Modernism was often kept at armâs length, and that was because the severe austerities of minimalist interiors were more about the coercive programmes of their designers than responses to clientsâ wishes. As Dorothy Todd and Raymond Mortimer put it in The New Interior Decoration (1929), âwe need fantasy, imagination, wit in our housesâŠThe Corbusier style of decoration is as formal as the old French salon⊠we require our houses to be quieter, more informal, more personal.â
Jane Stevenson pursues interconnected pluralist, undoctrinaire themes that affected all the arts of the period: she argues that ârefuseniksâ did not merely reject the directions taken by the so-called avant-garde, but created a counter-movement that, in its âcogent set of responses to the problemsâ of Modernity, can be called âmodern baroqueâ. In architecture, it was also named âdecoratorsâ baroqueâ and, since many interior designers and decorators were homosexual, irreverently labelled âbuggersâ baroqueâ. That all-embracing tag would include Lord Bernersâ multicoloured doves and his 1937 novel The Girls of Radcliff Hall (in which an all-male milieu is encapsulated in a girlsâ school story); âhettiesâ and ânanciesâ in the âMacSpaundayâ circle around the poets Louis MacNeice, Stephen Spender, W. H. Auden and Cecil Day-Lewis; NoĂ«l Coward, Cecil Beaton et al; and the high-camp world of Ronald Firbank. The last was conjured in the ultra-baroque roseate glow of his novel Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli (1926), where, in the Cathedral of Clemenza, clad only in his gorgeous mitre, the Primate, in pursuit of a choirboy, âswoopedâ to his death, and paternostering Phoebe Poco piously used her rosary beads to preserve His Eminenceâs detumescent modesty.
Stevensonâs is a beautifully written account of modern baroque in its many guises: that counter-culture had a lively eclecticism that was absent in mainstream Modernism, from which choice had been eliminated. She describes the social nuances of the period, the perception that the arts were in the hands of a âpack of pansiesâ (which, to a remarkable extent, was true), the influence of well-connected lesbians and indeed a panorama of queerness that stood in sharp contrast to the male-dominated (and drearily humourless) austerity of mainstream Modernism. There were, however, designs such as Mae West sofas, DalĂ lobster telephones and upholstered walls that perhaps verged more on kitsch than baroque.
Âé¶č
The book contains some errors: the architect and painter Ernest George, although important, was not âEarnestâ, and John Gloag was not an architect. More illustrations and some colour would have helped. However, it is scholarly, diverting and fascinating, all at once: a bracing draught that genuinely fills a huge void, an essential read to understand a period in all its diversity.
James Stevens Curlâs Making Dystopia will be published by Oxford University Press in August.
Âé¶č
Baroque between the Wars: Alternative Style in the Arts, 1918-1939
By Jane Stevenson
Oxford University PressÂ
336pp, ÂŁ35.00
ISBN 9780198808770
Published 11 January 2018
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Ő±á·Ąâs university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?






