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Design

circa 1900 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Design for wall panelling 'a l'Etrusque' by Mewès and Davis, c. 1900. The design is similar to the wall decoration on board the Louis XVI restaurant on the passenger liner Aquitania, which the firm decorated in 1914.

The architectural partnership was founded in 1900 by Charles Frédéric Mewès (1860- 1914) and Arthur Joseph Davis (1878-1951). Both studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris and became famous for their skillful reinterpretation of 18th-century styles.

They built a large practice working for rich financiers and industrialists both in France and Britain. They remodelled Luton Hoo for the diamond magnate Julius Wernher, and one of their most celebrated commission was the Ritz Hotel (1903-6) in London, the first steel-framed building in the city designed with a Parisian exterior and mansard roof, and interiors in the Louis XVI style.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
pen and wash
Brief description
Design for wall panelling 'a l'Etrusque' by Mewès and Davis, c. 1900.
Physical description
Coloured design for wall panelling 'a l'Etrusque'.
Dimensions
  • Height: 311mm
  • Width: 211mm
Style
Gallery label
Mewès and Davis (worked 1900-1914) Volume of designs for interiors in the Régence, Louis XV and XVI styles. French, c.1910 The firm of Mewès and Davis, architects and interior decorators, was founded in 1900 by Charles Edouard Mewès (1858- 1914) and Arthur Joseph Davis RA FRIBA (1878-1951). They had offices in London and Paris, the latter being the source of these drawings. The firm was best known for its design for hotels, the impetus for which came from Mewès, who designed the Ritz hotels in Paris and London and was described in an English obituary as 'the creator of the modern luxury hotel'. E.867-1975
Summary
Design for wall panelling 'a l'Etrusque' by Mewès and Davis, c. 1900. The design is similar to the wall decoration on board the Louis XVI restaurant on the passenger liner Aquitania, which the firm decorated in 1914.

The architectural partnership was founded in 1900 by Charles Frédéric Mewès (1860- 1914) and Arthur Joseph Davis (1878-1951). Both studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris and became famous for their skillful reinterpretation of 18th-century styles.

They built a large practice working for rich financiers and industrialists both in France and Britain. They remodelled Luton Hoo for the diamond magnate Julius Wernher, and one of their most celebrated commission was the Ritz Hotel (1903-6) in London, the first steel-framed building in the city designed with a Parisian exterior and mansard roof, and interiors in the Louis XVI style.
Bibliographic reference
Cat. 14 Edwardian Opulence. British Art at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century Yale venter for British Art, 2013. ISBN: 978-0-300-19025-0.
Collection
Accession number
E.867:17-1975

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Record createdFebruary 14, 2009
Record URL
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