Art Nouveau in Turin
Local implementation of a style of architecture and design / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Art Nouveau, in Turin, spread in the early twentieth century.
This new stylistic current involved various artistic disciplines including the applied arts and, predominantly, architecture. In the specific panorama of Turin, Art Nouveau was influenced, in its major works, by the important Parisian and Belgian schools, becoming one of the greatest Italian examples of this current, so much so as to establish Turin as one of the Italian capitals of the Art Nouveau style,[1] not without also undergoing inevitable eclectic and Art Deco incursions.
Due to the success of this stylistic current and the type of buildings that arose in the first decades of the twentieth century, Turin became one of the landmarks of Italian Art Nouveau, often renamed "floral style,"[2] so much so that conspicuous architectural evidence of that period can still be perceived today.[3]