20th Century Design: The 1950s

GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Dominated by conservative politics, social conformity, atomic anxiety, and a soaring birth rate, the 1950s also brought prosperity to many industrialized countries, especially the U.S. Once again, people had money to spend on entertainment and consumer products. Aided by growing mobility due to widespread car ownership, Americans created the "casual" lifestyle. Suburban neighborhoods full of tract houses complete with barbeque pits and boomerang coffee tables sprouted up across the country. Fast-food restaurants, like McDonald's, and fantasy theme parks, such as Disneyland (both founded in 1955), appeared upon the landscape. Large supermarkets increasingly replaced family owned grocery stores, while the advent of things like credit cards (1951) fed the American consumer frenzy for everything from ballpoint pens (invented 1950) to Barbie dolls (launched 1959).

Excerpt from
Dallas Museum of Art, Hot Cars, High Fashion, Cool Stuff: Designs of the 20th Century (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1996).

NOTES

ASSOCIATED CONTENT CHUNKS

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS  

IMAGE ASSETS 

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS 

TEACHING IDEAS 

RULES
apply to objects where department_id equals 60
apply to objects where date_end lte 1959
apply to objects where date_begin gte 1950

Category
rules_operator
AND
General Description
Dominated by conservative politics, social conformity, atomic anxiety, and a soaring birth rate, the 1950s also brought prosperity to many industrialized countries, especially the U.S. Once again, people had money to spend on entertainment and consumer products. Aided by growing mobility due to widespread car ownership, Americans created the "casual" lifestyle. Suburban neighborhoods full of tract houses complete with barbeque pits and boomerang coffee tables sprouted up across the country. Fast-food restaurants, like McDonald's, and fantasy theme parks, such as Disneyland (both founded in 1955), appeared upon the landscape. Large supermarkets increasingly replaced family owned grocery stores, while the advent of things like credit cards (1951) fed the American consumer frenzy for everything from ballpoint pens (invented 1950) to Barbie dolls (launched 1959).

Excerpt from
Dallas Museum of Art, Hot Cars, High Fashion, Cool Stuff: Designs of the 20th Century (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1996).

Fun Facts
 
Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes

rules
Apply To
Objects
department_id
Equals
60
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
*Decorative Arts and Design
decorative arts: AAT: 300054168
@bartsch-allen
Wright_Russel: ULAN: 500001139
Zeisel_Eva: ULAN: 500092239
Eames_Charles: ULAN: 500029567
Hall China Company: ULAN: 500333086
Eames_Ray: ULAN: 500027192
source file
time_and_place-0024.xml.nores