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And the public couldn't get enough of it.
Most "modern" consumer stuff was indeed shoddy, but surely not all. I have some modernist stuff around here (furniture, mostly) that's going strong after five-plus decades of regular use. But, you know, it wasn't (and isn't) the cheap stuff. The wooden stuff is built of good wood, the metal of good metal, et cetera.
As I noted earlier in this thread, much of the what we think of as post-war modernist style was around well before the war. People unversed in such things would be forgiven for thinking that that the Mies van der Rohe Barcelona chair dated from 1992, rather than 1929, as is the actual case. (Oh, and the real ones, as contrasted with the much more plentiful knockoffs, are quite durable indeed.)
Planned obsolescence run amok can be witnessed at any Ikea store. Many people apparently now regard furniture and housewares as transitory and "consumable" as clothing. While entering the big Blue and Yellow in Renton, Wash. one day the summer before last I overheard a young man utter to the young woman on his arm, "the key to Ikea's success is they know how to make cheap **** look good."
Couldn't have said it better myself.
Most "modern" consumer stuff was indeed shoddy, but surely not all. I have some modernist stuff around here (furniture, mostly) that's going strong after five-plus decades of regular use. But, you know, it wasn't (and isn't) the cheap stuff. The wooden stuff is built of good wood, the metal of good metal, et cetera.
As I noted earlier in this thread, much of the what we think of as post-war modernist style was around well before the war. People unversed in such things would be forgiven for thinking that that the Mies van der Rohe Barcelona chair dated from 1992, rather than 1929, as is the actual case. (Oh, and the real ones, as contrasted with the much more plentiful knockoffs, are quite durable indeed.)
Planned obsolescence run amok can be witnessed at any Ikea store. Many people apparently now regard furniture and housewares as transitory and "consumable" as clothing. While entering the big Blue and Yellow in Renton, Wash. one day the summer before last I overheard a young man utter to the young woman on his arm, "the key to Ikea's success is they know how to make cheap **** look good."
Couldn't have said it better myself.