
Victor Horta, Interior of the Tassel House, 1893
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IMAGE LIST | ACTIVITIES
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The Brussels townhouse that Victor Horta built for Émile Tassel is often called the first full expression of art nouveau. It was completed in 1893.
Tassel was a professor of geometry and a friend of the architect. A collector of Japanese prints and a music enthusiast, he entertained often. Like most of Horta's clients in the 1890s, he was also a member of a young, politically progressive middle class, eager to demonstrate its modernity.
Tassel's house illustrates many of the elements that went into making art nouveau: an alternate "take" on historical styles, an arts and crafts sensibility, and the modern materials of iron and glass. Horta himself did not see the building as a total break with the past. The stone exterior includes the consoles, moldings, and columns of classical architecture. But the columns are iron, not stone. The building had a smooth, fluid façade, unlike the carefully articulated planes of true classical buildings.
Walking inside, a visitor would sense a different mood: the delicacy and curving "femininity" of a rococo drawing room. Yet it was alloyed by modernity in the choice of materials and their interpretation as plant forms. From a calyxlike capital, the iron columns sprout slender iron strips to support the floor above. No attempt is made to disguise this material -- the rivets are clearly visible, decorative in their own right. They emphasize rather than conceal the structure. Yet Horta turned to wrought-iron craftsmen to fashion the industrially laminated material.
Horta's organization of interior space was innovative -- the slide shows the first-floor stair landing. Rooms were filled with natural light (from two light wells), and the floor plan had a fluid, asymmetrical flow. To achieve an integrated whole, Horta also insisted on designing all elements of the interior decoration: the stair rail and painted wall decoration, the mosaic flooring, electric light fixtures, even the door handle are elements of a total design. Such a complete visual environment, or Gesamtkunstwerk, was thoroughly modern in its desire to place modern man in a fully modern setting.
Learning Activities
Art
Discuss materials an architect would choose today to express his or her modernness. Collect images and research the materials of the new Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain.
Compare the decoration in your own house. Does it have a similar Gesamtkunstwerk?
Humanities
The Tassel House is now an embassy, and Horta's own residence is a museum. Discuss the appropriate use (public or private) or such historic structures.
Discuss which contemporary structures in your town will likely merit historic preservation in the future.
