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- Cedric Gibbons - Wikipedia
Austin Cedric Gibbons (March 23, 1890 [1] – July 26, 1960) was an American art director for the film industry He also made a significant contribution to motion picture theater architecture from the 1930s to 1950s
- Cedric Gibbons | Biography, Oscars, Facts | Britannica
Gibbons was among the first to replace painted scenery with three-dimensional furnishings His lighting innovations gave MGM films of the era a characteristic look, and his Art Deco sets for Our Dancing Daughters (1928) and other films set interior decorating trends across America
- Cedric Gibbons - IMDb
In 1918 he moved to Goldwyn as art director and, in 1924, began his 32 year stint as supervising art director for some 1500 MGM films, with direct responsibility in well over 150 of those He designed the Oscar itself, winning it 11 of the 37 times he was nominated for it
- Cedric Gibbons, Art Deco sets and the Hollywood dream
Gibbons was instrumental in creating an aesthetic that ran across all MGM films, tweaking each one to suit its genre In fact, the sets resembled the stars that acted out tableaux upon them, and were an extension of the escapism that wartime and postwar audiences craved
- The Impact of Cedric Gibbons on Hollywood Set Design
Cedric Gibbons was a film set designer who replaced painted backdrops with three-dimensional sets and created a craze for Art Deco
- Book on MGM Art Director Cedric Gibbons Reveals Over 100
A new book features the life and times of legendary designer and art director Cedric Gibbons and his work at MGM during the Golden Age of Hollywood
- Cedric Gibbons, the Irish American who designed the Oscar
Did you know that an Irish American designed the original Oscar statuette? One of the most lauded set designers in US film history, Cedric Gibbons went on to win 11 Academy Awards of his own for art direction – a category record that remains unsurpassed to this day
- Cedric Gibbons — The John DeCuir Production Design Studies Center
He was most noted in film history for replacing painted scenery with three-dimensional furnishings Gibbons' set designs, particularly those in such films as Born to Dance (1936) and Rosalie (1937), heavily inspired motion picture theater architecture in the late 1930s through 1950s
- Cedric Gibbons - artdecocollection. com
Cedric Gibbons’s style is defined by glamour, symmetry, and refined modernity He favored elegant interiors with clean lines, polished surfaces, and dramatic spatial control His work often translated Art Deco ideas into cinematic form without making them feel stiff or purely decorative
- Cedric Gibbons - MoMA
For access to motion picture film stills for research purposes, please contact the Film Study Center at fsc@moma org For more information about film loans and our Circulating Film and Video Library, please visit https: www moma org research circulating-film
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