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But high-profile clients weren't enough to keep her fashion house afloat. After it closed in 1929, she continued designing textiles, finding an eager client in Metz & Co., which bought more than 200 of her designs. Although her later designs became slightly more commercial, they are still remarkable for their strong sense of color, originality and vitality. Delaunay, who died at age 94 in 1979, was extraordinarily versatile. Besides her textiles and clothing, she illustrated books, painted ceramics, and designed costumes, interiors, tapestries and rugs. After World War II, she concentrated on her painting. The timing of the Cooper-Hewitt show couldn't be better. Several of Robert Delaunay's cubist-inflected canvases can be seen in a survey of early 20th-century art at the Guggenheim Museum, two blocks away. "Color Moves: Art and Fashion by Sonia Delaunay" opens March 18 and will close June 5. There are no plans for it to travel.
[Associated
Press;
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