We’ve already talked a bit about Tutankhamun, and the finding and opening of his tomb in 1922, under E is for Egyptomania, and N is for Nymphaea Lotus, and Nymphaea Caerulea, so instead, let’s have a look at another popular Art Deco motif – torches!
The Art Deco style was keen on its motifs, and things like sunbursts and bright colours were used widely. I guess torches could fall into this theme, unless, in 1931, people were looking forward to the spectacle that would be the 1932 Olympics, which was bigger and better than any that had come before! Or maybe it was just to do with the name of the building, and the trade of previous landlords!
I say 1931, because the best example of torches as ornamentation on an Art Deco building in Loughborough appear on a building constructed in 1931! We’ve actually seen this building before under Keystones, and I’m pretty sure we’ll see it again, but just look at these wonderful impressions of torches, which adorn the end pillars of the building, on both the top and the bottom of the frontage onto Wards End and that facing Brown’s Lane!! There are 8 in total! Firstly, a photograph of the frontage onto Wards End, and a close up of the top right hand torch. Then the corner of the building where Wards End meets Browns Lane, with a close up of that corner pillar. Finally, a close up of the torch furthest along Browns Lane, towards Royland Road.
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