Not currently on display at the V&A

Moth Balls and Sugar Cubes

Dress Fabric
1927 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The Paris Exhibition of decorative arts of 1925 had an enormous impact on American design when it toured the USA the following year. It encouraged American designers to create furniture and interiors in the modern style. One example is this printed silk dress fabric called ‘Mothballs and Sugar Cubes’. It was designed by the well-known photographer Edward Steichen for the Stehli Silks Corporation. The pattern is adapted from a photograph of mothballs and sugar cubes lit from different angles so that they form an abstract pattern in black, grey and white. It is part of the ‘Americana’ range of dress fabrics, which the firm commissioned from leading artists in 1927. To make a change from ubiquitous floral patterns, these fabrics were designed specifically to depict contemporary American life.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleMoth Balls and Sugar Cubes (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Printed silk crêpe de Chine
Brief description
Printed silk crêpe de Chine, USA, 1927.
Physical description
Printed silk crêpe-de-chine. Design adapted from a photograph of mothballs and sugar cubes lit from different angles so that they form an abstract pattern in black, grey and white.
Dimensions
  • Length: 20.5cm
  • Width: 19cm
Style
Credit line
Given by the Stehli Silks Corporation
Object history
Registered File number 1929/8683.
Summary
The Paris Exhibition of decorative arts of 1925 had an enormous impact on American design when it toured the USA the following year. It encouraged American designers to create furniture and interiors in the modern style. One example is this printed silk dress fabric called ‘Mothballs and Sugar Cubes’. It was designed by the well-known photographer Edward Steichen for the Stehli Silks Corporation. The pattern is adapted from a photograph of mothballs and sugar cubes lit from different angles so that they form an abstract pattern in black, grey and white. It is part of the ‘Americana’ range of dress fabrics, which the firm commissioned from leading artists in 1927. To make a change from ubiquitous floral patterns, these fabrics were designed specifically to depict contemporary American life.
Bibliographic reference
Samuels, Charlotte. Art Deco Textiles. London : V&A Publications, 2003. Plate 67.
Collection
Accession number
T.87P-1930

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Record createdAugust 29, 2002
Record URL
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