The Modern Interior

(Wang) #1

decorating” today’, he wrote, ‘bring a mental picture of busy people


running around with a pick-me-up for wilting upholstery, and scouring


Third Avenue for “something amusing and chic” all for ten per cent


profit’.^4 Significantly Robsjohn-Gibbings described himself as an ‘interior


designer’, a member, that is, of a new community of aesthetic practitioners


who saw themselves as highly professionalized and closely aligned with, 187


The living area of Taliesin, Wisconsin, the home of Frank Lloyd Wright, designed by
Wright, illustrated in Roberto Aloi’s L’Arredamento Moderno, 1955.

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