Post War Period Flashcards
After the devastation of _______________, urgent reconstruction of destroyed or damaged buildings and their interiors were jumpstarted, primarily through____________________ to the newly-established Philippine government, and private investment from locals and foreigners based in the country.
World War II, American government aid
______________ as a discipline was still firmly under the field of Architecture, with architects designing the interiors of their own building projects.
Interior Design
an Austrian- Jewish architect and longtime Manila resident who designed the reconstructed Jewish synagogue in Manila, ___________, in a restrained modernist style in 1947 (Ephraim 2003, 187-188).
Ernest Korneld
Prominent Filipinos who were assiduous art collectors also practiced interior design, primarily by influencing others to follow the designed interiors of their homes, as was the case of ______________ and ___________ (Villanueva and Perez 1993, 95).
Arturo de Santos and Luis Ma. Araneta
anybody who provided furniture and lighting, collected and hung art on walls, or did the curtains, upholstery and carpets were considered _________________
“interior decorators,”
new middle-class housing
primarily the split-level
“bungalow”, as well as the apartment-rowhouse
upper-class
“ranch house”
who were primarily involved in furniture manufacturing, had a flourishing business in interior design throughout the Fifties and Sixties.
Phyllis Harvey and Audrey Guersey
the first Philippine school to introduce Interior Design as a Fine
Arts major starting in 1954
UST
The Interior Design profession became more specialized through the return of ________________ who were trained in interior design abroad;
Filipino architect-teachers
spread of new suburban projects, especially in upscale residential “villages”
- Makati (Forbes Park, San Lorenzo Village
- Dasmariñas and Bel-Air Village)
- San Juan (Green Hills)
- and Quezon City (Santo Domingo, White Plains, and La
Vista)