Art Deco Scotland: Design and Architecture in the Jazz Age with Bruce Peter
Wednesday 28th May
Topping & Company Booksellers of Edinburgh, 2 Blenheim Place, Edinburgh EH7 5JH
7pm
7.30pm

Bruce Peter is a Professor of Design History at Glasgow School of Art. He is the author of a number of architecture and design books, primarily related to transport, leisure and entertainment.
Bruce joins us to talk on his brilliant new book Art Deco Scotland in which he explores the variety of Art Deco architecture and design across the country. Including everything from iconic structures such as the Beresford Hotel, the Radio Cinema in Kilbirnie, the Portobello Lido, the Tower of Empire in Glasgow and the Clyde-built Queen Mary - and much more!
'The entire effect is gay, welcoming, and, so to speak, "future"' ~ Raymond Mortimer on Glasgow's Empire Exhibition, Vogue, June 1938
Art Deco is a design style infused with glamour and energy. Emerging from the smart metropolises of Paris and New York in the 1920s, its impact quickly spread beyond these cities.
A remarkable range of Art Deco objects, structures and images were created in Scotland as architects and designers incorporated features of Art Deco and moderne into their work. These forms were to be found in fashionable new villas, luxury ocean liners and the fleeting Empire Exhibition, as well as in everyday spaces such as shops, lidos, tramcars, cafes, cinemas and even pithead baths.
"The book is excellent, a lasting testament to the generations who came before us and wanted to leave the world a better place." ~ The Times