NY050219 Catalog
NY050219 Catalog
NY050219 Catalog
17 December, 2pm
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Our team is comprised of experts from auction houses, museums, galleries and other leading arts
institutions. In addition to auctions in our New York, London, Hong Kong and Geneva salerooms, Phillips
holds private sales and curated selling exhibitions across all of our categories around the world. Our range
of services includes appraisals for private clients, advisors, attorneys and other key fduciaries, and our
dedicated Trusts, Estates and Valuations team provides complimentary reviews of collections.
1. Jean Royère 1902-1981
Estimate
$30,000-40,000
Provenance
Nadim Majdalani, Beirut
Laurice Daou, Beirut, 1957
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Jean Royère, décorateur à Paris, exh. cat., Musée
des Arts Décoratifs, Paris, 1999, p. 20
Pierre-Emmanuel Martin-Vivier, Jean Royère,
Paris, 2002, p. 130
Galerie Jacques Lacoste and Galerie Patrick
Seguin, Jean Royère, Volume 2, Paris, 2012, p. 56
Pierre-Emmanuel Martin-Vivier, Jean Royère,
Paris, 2017, p. 146
2. Claude Lalanne 1925-2019
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
3. Myrbor
“Le Drapeau” carpet Provenance
circa 1932 Fashion Institute of Technology, New York, 1988
Hand-dyed and hand-knotted wool. Charles A. Whitaker Auction Co., Philadelphia, “Fall
74 x 56 in. (188 x 142.2 cm) Couture and Textiles,” October 28-29, 2016, lot 519
Afer a design by Joan Miró. Woven by Acquired from the above by the present owner
Maison Myrbor, Sétif, Algeria. Reverse
embroidered MYR/BOR. Literature
an exhibition of contemporary french tapestries, exh.
Estimate cat., Charles E. Slatkin Galleries, New York, 1965, p. 35
$4,000-6,000 Jacques Dupin and Ariane Lelong-Mainaud, Joan Miró,
Catalogue raisonné. Paintings, Volume I: 1908–1930,
Paris, 1999, no. 314 for the oil on canvas
Property from an Important Private Collection
Estimate
$100,000-150,000
Provenance
Madame Lebon
Galerie Jacques Lacoste and Galerie Patrick Seguin, Paris
Private collection, New York
Phillips de Pury & Company, New York, “Design
Masters,” December 13, 2011, lot 24
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Mobilier et Décoration, no. 4, May 1961, p. 27
for a drawing
Pierre-Emmanuel Martin-Vivier, Jean Royère, Paris,
2002, illustrated p. 258
Galerie Jacques Lacoste and Galerie Patrick Seguin,
Jean Royère, Volume 1, Paris, 2012, illustrated p. 119
Galerie Jacques Lacoste and Galerie Patrick Seguin,
Jean Royère, Volume 2, Paris, 2012, illustrated p. 74
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
Nadim Majdalani, Beirut
Laurice Daou, Beirut, 1957
Acquired from the above by the present owner
6. Jean Royère 1902-1981 7. Jean Royère 1902-1981
Estimate Estimate
$7,000-9,000 $18,000-24,000
Provenance Provenance
Nadim Majdalani, Beirut Nadim Majdalani, Beirut
Laurice Daou, Beirut, 1957 George Fayad, Beruit, 1957
Acquired from the above by the present owner Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
René Chavance, “Les aménagements nouveaux
de Jean Royère et les réfexions qu’ils inspirent,”
Mobilier et Décoration, no. 8, November 1956, p. 15
for a similar example
Catherine and Stéphane de Beyrie and Jacques
Ouaiss, Jean Royere, New York, 2000, pp. 113, 158
for a similar example
Pierre-Emmanuel Martin-Vivier, Jean Royère,
Paris, 2002, p. 180 for a similar example
8. Jean Royère 1902-1981
“Boule” armchair
circa 1957
Fabric upholstery, oak.
27 1/2 x 38 1/2 x 37 1/2 in. (69.9 x 97.8 x 95.3 cm)
Estimate
$120,000-180,000
Provenance
Nadim Majdalani, Beirut
Laurice Daou, Beirut, 1957
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Jean Royère, décorateur à Paris, exh. cat., Musée
des Arts Décoratifs, Paris, 1999, pp. 28, 120
Pierre-Emmanuel Martin-Vivier, Jean Royère, Paris,
2002, pp. 231, 284
Galerie Jacques Lacoste and Galerie Patrick Seguin,
Jean Royère, Volume 1, Paris, 2012, p. 75
Galerie Jacques Lacoste and Galerie Patrick Seguin,
Jean Royère, Volume 2, Paris, 2012, pp. 46, 274
Pierre-Emmanuel Martin-Vivier, Jean Royère, Paris,
2017, pp. 238, 299
The present Boule armchair was acquired in 1957 from Royère and Majdalani would go on to collaborate on a
the architect Nadim Majdalani in Beirut. Majdalani large number of both residential and commercial interiors
had met Jean Royère in Paris and subsequently, in throughout Lebanon, which at the time was experiencing
the late 1940s, the two opened an ofce of decoration a great deal of growth and new construction. These
and architecture together under both their names interiors appeared in French publications throughout the
on avenue des Français in Beirut. The collaboration period, with Nadim Majdalani noted as a collaborator
would continue into the 1960s. Majdalani also owned in the captions. For his part, Royère loved to travel
a furniture workshop and began to execute Royère’s and throughout his career sought out new markets
designs according to the detailed plans he had sent over across the world. As he recounted in 1963, “What you
from Paris. Nadine Begdache, the daughter of Majdalani, have to remember is that in these new and developing
recounted that Royère’s furniture was “distinguished countries, cooperation between architect and decorator
by their originality and their audacity…Everything is facilitated by the fact that, unlike in France, people
he imagined was of great freshness and above all don’t spend their time patching up and modernizing old
great comfort (Fif Abou Dib, “En tandem avec Nadim buildings (Revue de l’Ameublement, December 1963).”
Majdalani,” L’Orient-Le Jour, May 5, 2000).”
The form of the present armchair, a variation of the
lower-back version now commonly referred to as the
Ours Polaire armchair, had been exhibited by Royère as
early as 1942 in the Salon des artistes décorateurs.
○ 9. Jean Royère 1902-1981
“Persane” foor lamp Jean Royère featured his Persane foor lamp in the
circa 1954 1954 Salon des arts ménagers as part of a bedroom
Gilt steel, fabric shades.
setting alongside an Œuf chair in fuzzy gray and red
72 3/8 in. (183.8 cm) high
upholstery and a Flaque cofee table in black straw
Estimate marquetry with a constellation of golden straw stars.
$60,000-80,000 Against a large light green curtain in the background,
the long graceful arms of the Persane stood “gushing
Provenance
like meteors to carry of the light,” in the words of
Galerie Neo Senso, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present owner, René Chavance, who reviewed the Salon for the April
circa 1990 1954 issue of Mobilier et Décoration.
10. Jean Royère 1902-1981 Jean Royère frst designed the Ours Polaire sofa for
the rooms he occupied in his mother’s apartment at
“Ours Polaire” sofa 234 rue du Faubourg-Saint-Honoré on the occasion
1950s of re-decorating her residence in 1947. This example
Original fabric upholstery, cherry wood feet,
now resides in the collection of the Musée des Arts
ash internal frame.
30 x 94 x 46 1/2 in. (76.2 x 238.8 x 118.1 cm) Décoratifs, Paris. Later that year he presented the sofa
at La Résidence française, an exhibition organized
Estimate by the publication Art et Industrie. The sofa became
$300,000-500,000 ubiquitous in Royère’s interiors of the late 1950s and
early 1960s. Today it is recognized as one of his most
Provenance
Galerie Patrick Seguin, Paris iconic and sought-afer designs.
Acquired from the above by the present owner
The sof round form of the Ours, which practically
Literature eliminates the typical parts and structure of most
“La Résidence Française,” Art et Industrie, no. 8, seating in favor of one continuous curve, is in keeping
June 1947, p. 20
with Royère’s whimsical aesthetic as well as the
René Chavance, “Les aménagements nouveaux de
Jean Royère et les réfexions qu’ils inspirent,” Mobilier biomorphic style already in full force in the 1950s.
et Décoration, no. 8, November 1956, p. 21 Yet while other designers worked with new materials
Jean Royère, décorateur à Paris, exh. cat., Musée des and techniques to achieve their organic forms—Eero
Arts Décoratifs, Paris, 1999, throughout Saarinen’s fberglass Womb chair and the Eameses’ use
Galerie Jacques Lacoste and Galerie Patrick Seguin,
of molded plywood come to mind—the Ours relied on
Jean Royère, Volumes 1 and 2, Paris, 2012, throughout
Pierre-Emmanuel Martin-Vivier, Jean Royère, Paris, traditional cabinetmaking methods to achieve its novel
2017, throughout shape. Photographs of an Ours frame, likely taken in
the courtyard of an artisan in the Faubourg Saint-
Antoine, show the complex wooden understructure
that served as the initial armature. To this carcass a
metal frame padded with horsehair further defned
the form, which was fnally covered by the fabric
upholstery, typically a plush velvet sourced from Italy.
Table lamp
circa 1959
Glazed stoneware, brass, fabric shade.
31 in. (78.7 cm) high
Underside signed with artist’s cipher and FRANCE.
Estimate
$6,000-8,000
Provenance
Private collection, Massachusetts
Literature
Philippe Jousse and Galerie Jousse Entreprise,
Georges Jouve, Paris, 2005, pp. 201, 289
Property of a Private Collector, New York
“Oiseau 4 pattes”
circa 1951
Glazed stoneware, painted metal.
14 1/2 x 7 1/2 x 9 in. (36.8 x 19.1 x 22.9 cm)
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Literature
Michel Faré, Georges Jouve, Paris, 1965, pp. 19, 69
Philippe Jousse and Galerie Jousse Entreprise,
Georges Jouve, Paris, 2005, pp. 285, 308
Property of a Private Collector, New York
Estimate
$7,000-9,000
Provenance
Magen H Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner, circa 2010
Literature
Marie Laure Jousset, Charlotte Perriand, exh. cat.,
Centre Pompidou, Paris, 2005, p. 153
Jacques Barsac, Charlotte Perriand Un art d’habiter
1903-1959, Paris, 2005, p. 470
Jacques Barsac, Charlotte Perriand: Complete Works
Volume 3, 1956-1968, Paris, 2017, pp. 369, 373
Property from an Important New York Collection
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Provenance
Galerie de Beyrie, New York
Private Collection, New York, 1995
Sotheby’s, New York, “20th Century Design,”
June 9, 2015, lot 62
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Boris J. Lacroix, “Ensemble de Décorateurs au Salon des
Arts Ménagers,” Art & Décoration, no. 39, 1954, p. 2
Alan and Christine Counord, Serge Mouille: Luminaires,
1953-1962, Paris, 1983, p. 28
Pierre Émile Pralus, Serge Mouille: A French Classic, Saint
Cyr au Mont d’Or, 2006, pp. 66, 122, 166-67, 171, 176
Property of a Private Collector, New York
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Property from an Important Collection
Estimate Literature
$10,000-15,000 Michel Weill, “L’appartement subtil,” Maison
Française, no. 103, December 1956-January 1957,
pp. 44-45
19. Serge Mouille 1922-1988
Estimate
$3,000-5,000
Provenance
Private collection, Austria
Literature
Alan and Christine Counord, Serge Mouille:
Luminaires, 1953-1962, Paris, 1983, p. 28
Pierre Émile Pralus, Serge Mouille: A French Classic,
Saint Cyr au Mont d’Or, 2006, pp. 66, 76, 207
Property from an Important Collection
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Literature
Pierre Émile Pralus, Serge Mouille: A French Classic,
Saint Cyr au Mont d’Or, 2006, p. 181
Four bottles
1960s
Glazed earthenware.
Tallest: 15 1/8 in. (38.4 cm) high
Underside of each incised Ruelland.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Thomas Fritsch, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 2005
Literature
Pierre Staudenmeyer, La Céramique Française
des Années 50, Paris, 2001, pp. 45, 89, 100-1,
282-85 for similar examples
23. Paolo Bufa 1903-1970
Low table
circa 1940
Chestnut.
21 in. (53.3 cm) high, 27 5/8 in. (70.2 cm) diameter
Executed by Mario Quarti, Milan, Italy.
Together with a certifcate of expertise from
the Paolo Bufa Archive.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Private collection, Biella
Literature
Guglielmo Ulrich, Arredamento: Mobili e oggetti
d’arte decorativa, Milan, 1950s, fg. 48
24. Paolo Venini 1895-1959
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Literature
Franco Deboni, Venini Glass: Catalogue
1921-2007, Volume II, Turin, 2007, fg. 150
25. Stilnovo
Ceiling light, model no. 1126
circa 1959
Painted steel, brass, glass.
68 1/2 in. (174 cm) drop, 37 1/4 in. (94.6 cm) diameter
Manufactured by Stilnovo, Milan, Italy.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
Stilnovo: apparecchi per l’illuminazione, sales
catalogue, Milan, 1963, p. 21
Stilnovo, exh. cat., Luminaires-Moderniste,
Berlin, 2016, p. 128
26. Gio Ponti 1891-1979
Pair of sofas
circa 1938
Walnut, fabric upholstery.
Each: 33 1/4 x 63 x 27 1/2 in. (84.5 x 160 x 69.9 cm)
Together with a certifcate of expertise from the
Gio Ponti Archives.
Estimate
$18,000-24,000
Provenance
Private collection, Genoa
Literature
“Tre divani per voi,” Domus, no. 125, May 1938,
p. 40 for a drawing
27. Max Ingrand 1908-1969
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
Quaderni Fontana Arte 5, sales catalogue,
Milan, 1963, p. 51
Franco Deboni, Fontana Arte: Gio Ponti, Pietro
Chiesa, Max Ingrand, Turin, 2012, fg. 314
28. Max Ingrand 1908-1969
Estimate
$30,000-40,000
Provenance
Private collection, Turin
Literature
“Consigli per la casa,” Domus, no. 213, September
1946, p. 38
Marco Romanelli and Sandra Severi, Gino Sarfatti:
Selected Works 1938-1973, Milan, 2012, pp. 148, 465
30. Max Ingrand 1908-1969 31. Fontana Arte
Set of fve “Micro” wall lights, model no. 2093 Low table, model no. 2013
circa 1962 circa 1961
Glass, nickel-plated brass. Glass, mirrored glass, painted metal, brass.
Each: 8 1/4 x 4 3/8 x 5 3/8 in. (21 x 11.1 x 13.7 cm) 15 1/2 x 42 x 22 in. (39.4 x 106.7 x 55.9 cm)
Manufactured by Fontana Arte, Milan, Italy. Manufactured by Fontana Arte, Milan, Italy.
Estimate Estimate
$10,000-15,000 $5,000-7,000
Provenance Provenance
Private collection, Voghera Private collection, Rome
Literature Literature
Quaderni Fontana Arte 1, sales catalogue, Milan, Quaderni Fontana Arte 2, sales catalogue,
1960s, p. 62 Milan, 1960s, p. 15
Edoardo Paoli, “Specchi nell’arredamento,” Vitrum,
no. 151, September-October 1965, pp. 45-46
Pierre-Emmanuel Martin-Vivier, Max Ingrand, du
verre à la lumière, Paris, 2009, p. 203
32. Angelo Lelii 1911-1979
Estimate
$18,000-24,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
Anty Pansera et. al., Arredoluce: Catalogo Ragionato
1943-1987, Milan, 2018, pp. 200, 317
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
Private collection, Como
Literature
L’Arte dello Smalto Paolo De Poli, exh. cat., Palazzo
Della Ragione, Padua, 1984, p. 92
Alberto Bassi and Serena Mafoletti, ed., Paolo De
Poli: artigiano, imprenditore, designer, Padua, 2017,
pp. 167, 210, 216-218, 237, 422
34. Toni Zuccheri 1937-2008
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Literature
la Biennale di Venezia: catalogo della XXXII
esposizione biennale internazionale d’arte, Venice,
1964, n.p. for an advertisement
Arno Hammacher, “Gli uccelli in vetro e bronzo di
Venini,” Domus, no. 423, February 1965, p. 54
Marina Barovier, Rosa Barovier Mentasti and Attilia
Dorigato, Il Vetro Di Murano Alle Biennali 1895-1972,
Milan, 1995, p. 203
Anna Venini Diaz de Santillana, Venini Catalogue
Raisonné 1921-1986, Milan, 2000, pp. 181, 228
Franco Deboni, Venini Glass: Its History, Artists and
Techniques, Catalogue 1921-2007, Volume 1, Turin,
2007, p. 231, The Green Catalogue (appendix), pl. 6
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Provenance
Private collection, Forlì
Literature
“Treccia di paglia,” Domus, no. 115, July 1937, p. 29
“Per il giardino e la campagna,” Domus, no. 188,
August 1943, p. 384 for a similar example
36. Gio Ponti and Paolo de Poli
1891-1979 and 1905-1996
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Provenance
Private collection, Pavia
Literature
“Documenti delle Produzioni Italiane,” Domus, no. 136,
April 1939, p. 75 for a similar example of the larger box
Cristalli d’Arte, Quaderni Fontana Arte 3, sales
catalogue, Milan, 1960s, p. 39 for the smaller box
39. Melchiorre Bega 1898-1976
Low table
circa 1952
Limed oak, glass, brass.
14 3/4 in. (37.5 cm) high, 24 5/8 in. (62.5 cm) diameter
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Literature
Roberto Aloi, L’Arredamento moderno,
quinta serie, Milan, 1952, fg. 464
40. Stilnovo
Rare nine-arm ceiling light
1950s
Brass, painted aluminum.
25 1/2 in. (64.8 cm) drop, 38 3/4 in. (98.4 cm) diameter
Manufactured by Stilnovo, Milan, Italy.
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
Private collection, Rome
Literature
Gerhard Krohn and Fritz Hierl, Formschöne Lampen
und Beleuchtungsanlagen, Munich, 1952, p. 89 for
a similar example
Stilnovo, exh. cat., Luminaires-Moderniste, Berlin,
2016, p. 32 for a similar example
41. Stilnovo
Set of four wall lights, model no. 2128
circa 1959
Glass, brass.
Each: 23 5/8 x 11 1/2 x 8 in. (60 x 29.2 x 20.3 cm)
Manufactured by Stilnovo, Milan, Italy.
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
Stilnovo: apparecchi per l’illuminazione,
sales catalogue, Milan, 1963, p. 43
Stilnovo, exh. cat., Luminaires-Moderniste,
Berlin, 2016, p. 129
42. Gio Ponti 1891-1979
Low table
circa 1955
Ash, glass, brass.
20 1/8 in. (51.1 cm) high, 31 7/8 in. (81 cm) diameter
Manufactured by Industria Salotti e Arredamenti,
Bergamo, Italy. Together with a certifcate of
expertise from the Gio Ponti Archives.
Estimate
$6,000-8,000
Provenance
Fondazione Livio e Maria Garzanti, Forlì
Literature
Franco Bertoni, Gio Ponti: “Idee” d’arte e di
architettura a Imola e in Romagna, exh. cat.,
Centro Polivalente Gianni Isola, Imola, 2012, p. 197
Illustration of a bedroom with
Carlo Ratti daybed, circa 1955.
Daybed
circa 1955
Birch plywood, fabric upholstery, brass.
19 1/8 x 82 1/4 x 32 1/2 in. (48.6 x 208.9 x 82.6 cm)
Manufactured by Industria Legni Curvati,
Lissone, Italy.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Private collection, Monza
Literature
Domus, no. 317, April 1956, n.p. for an
advertisement
Irene de Guttry and Maria Paola Maino,
Il Mobile Italiano Degli Anni ‘40 e ‘50, Bari,
1992, p. 248 for a drawing
44. Franco Albini 1905-1977
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
Private collection, Rimini
Literature
“Per un collezionista,” Domus, no. 338,
January 1958, p. 31 for a similar example
Franco Albini & Franca Helg Design,
Milan, 2009, n.p.
45. Stilnovo
Floor lamp
1950s
Acrylic, painted aluminum, nickel-plated
brass, painted brass, painted steel, marble.
25 1/2 in. (64.8 cm) high
Manufactured by Stilnovo, Milan, Italy.
Interior of each shade with manufacturer’s
label printed MILANO/STILNOVO/ITALY.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
46. Stilnovo
Pair of ceiling lights, model no. 1158
circa 1955
Painted aluminum, brass, painted metal, glass.
Each: 56 in. (142.2 cm) drop, 23 5/8 in. (60 cm) diameter
Manufactured by Stilnovo, Milan, Italy.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
Domus, no. 374, January 1961, n.p. for an
advertisement
Stilnovo: apparecchi per l’illuminazione, sales
catalogue, Milan, 1963, p. 12
Clémence and Didier Krzentowski, eds., The
Complete Designers’ Lights II: 35 Years of Collecting,
Paris, 2014, p. 70
Stilnovo, exh. cat., Luminaires-Moderniste,
Berlin, 2016, pp. 124, 153
47. Gio Ponti 1891-1979
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Provenance
Private collection, Forlì
Literature
“Un Appartamento Risistemato a Milano,” Domus,
no. 131, November 1938, p. 18 for a similar example
Vito Latis, I Libri Nella Casa, Milan, 1945, p. 19
for a similar example
Interior of an apartment,
Milan, circa 1938. Image
© Editoriale Domus S.p.A.
48. Ignazio Gardella 1905-1999
Estimate
$6,000-8,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
Roberto Aloi, Esempi di arredamento moderno di tutto il
mondo: Tavoli, tavolini, carrelli, Milano, 1950, fgs. 36, 57
“Spedizione per Stoccolma N.4,” Domus, no. 282,
May 1953, p. 34
Giulio Carlo Argan, Ignazio Gardella, Milan, 1959, p. 198
Irene de Guttry and Maria Paola Maino, Il Mobile Italiano
Degli Anni ‘40 e ‘50, Bari, 1992, p. 33
49. Stilnovo
Floor lamp, model no. 4076
circa 1963
Glass, brass, painted steel.
67 3/4 in. (172.1 cm) high
Manufactured by Stilnovo, Milan, Italy. Interior
of shade with manufacturer’s label printed
MILANO/STILNOVO/ITALY.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
Stilnovo: apparecchi per l’illuminazione, sales
catalogue, Milan, 1963, p. 66
50. Stilnovo
Ceiling light
circa 1960
Brass, painted steel, painted metal, glass.
32 3/4 in. (83.2 cm) drop, 30 1/2 x 22 1/8 in. (77.5 x 56.2 cm)
Manufactured by Stilnovo, Milan, Italy.
Estimate
$6,000-8,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
51. Angelo Lelii 1911-1979
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
Alexander Koch, Modern Lighting of the ‘50s,
Stuttgart, 2012, p. 47
Anty Pansera et. al., Arredoluce: Catalogo
Ragionato 1943-1987, Milan, 2018, pp. 144, 289
Estimate
$12,000-18,000
Provenance
Banca Nazionale del Lavoro, Italy
54. Elio Monesi 1927-1994
The present lot is documented in the Archivio The present lot has been registered in the
Gregotti under photo negative number 1/10/4. Arredoluce Archives, Italy, as number 8929165.
55. Angelo Ostuni and Roberto Forti
Unknown and 1923-2015
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Provenance
Private collection, Varese
Literature
Thomas Bräuniger, Giuseppe Ostuni: O-Luce,
apparecchi per illuminazione, Berlin, 2015, p. 116
56. Max Ingrand 1908-1969
Chest of drawers
circa 1962
Wenge-veneered wood, plastic laminate-
covered wood.
29 5/8 x 58 3/4 x 19 3/4 in. (75.2 x 149.2 x 50.2 cm)
Manufactured by Brugnoli Mobili, Cantù, Italy.
Estimate
$18,000-24,000
Provenance
Phillips, New York, “Design,” June 12, 2008, lot 203
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Esperienze di design in Cantù, exh. cat.,
Centrostampa Banco Lariano, Cantù, 1986, n.p.
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Provenance
Private collection, Bologna
Literature
Giuliana Gramigna, Repertorio 1950/1980,
Milan, 1985, p. 189
60. Alessandro Mendini and
Giorgio Gregori 1931-2019 and 1957-1995
Unique cabinet
1985
Macassar ebony, walnut burl, and
sycamore-veneered wood, plastic laminate inlay,
chromium-plated metal.
33 3/4 x 68 x 23 3/4 in. (85.7 x 172.7 x 60.3 cm)
Produced by Mariani Armadi, Lissone, Italy for
Studio Alchimia, Milan, Italy. Underside incised
Alessandro Mendini/GIORGIO GREGORI/1985.
Estimate
$12,000-18,000
Provenance
Adriana Guerriero and Studio Alchimia, Milan
Private collection, Virginia, acquired from
the above, 1985
Exhibited
“Le Afnità Elettive,” XVII Triennale, Milan, 1985
Literature
Carlo Guenzi, Le Afnità Elettive, Milan, 1985,
illustrated pp. 105, 109
Pierre Restany, “Il Parnaso del design,” Domus,
no. 660, April 1985, illustrated p. 82
Annetta Hanna, “Psychodrama in Milan,” ID,
May/June 1985, illustrated p. 17
Kazuko Sato, Alchimia: Never-Ending Italian
Design, Tokyo, 1985, illustrated pp. 42, 44-45
The XVII Milan Triennale included a special exhibition sat in one of his chairs and acted as a tongue-in-cheek
titled “Le Afnità Elettive” (“The Elective Afnities”) criticism of the “deifcation of design…and designers”
which presented twenty-one displays by Italian and (Annetta Hanna, “Psychodrama in Milan,” ID, p. 76).
foreign designers such as Ettore Sottsass, Robert The lower component, called “Out,” featured a small
Venturi, and Michael Graves. The aim of the exhibition opening in the platform through which visitors viewed
was twofold: to support the region’s furniture industry, a mirror-lined room created by Anna Gili that included a
historically known for its high level of crafsmanship, fashion design for a human from the future. According
and to allow the “twenty-one designers [to] research to Mendini, the entire display was meant to question
their afnities,” as the exhibition catalogue explained. “the paradox of mass avant-garde.”
This open-ended prompt resulted in experimental
tableaux that explored themes of psychoanalysis Though the present cabinet is a unique piece rather
and proposed new, radical ways of living. The Italian than an object of mass production, it still addresses this
postmodernist designer Alessandro Mendini presented “paradox.” The pixelated motif made in inlaid woods on
a range of household furniture, including the present the top and sides appears throughout Mendini’s work,
cabinet that he designed with Studio Alchimia co- including the rug in his display. These patterns come
founder Giorgio Gregori. from what the designer called his “Mendinigraph.” As an
ironic gesture, it was meant to be used as a stencil that
Mendini called his exhibition “Black-Out” and divided designers could use and re-use to construct avant-garde
his display into two levels. The top of the display, forms, further poking fun at what Mendini perceived to
called “Black,” contained various pieces of furniture—a be an emptiness in the avant-garde of the mid-1980s.
table, bar cart, chairs, lamps, and a rug—that Mendini Despite this pessimism, this one-of-a-kind piece of
designed with other Studio Alchimia associates. Central furniture is truly a pinnacle expression of Italian design
to the display was a hyper-realistic wax sculpture of from the second half of the twentieth century.
Mendini (what he called a “counter-monument”) that
“Alessandria d’Egitto” bookcase from the In 1980, the Italian radical design collective Studio
“Bau.Haus II” collection Alchimia released their “Bau.Haus II” furniture
circa 1980
collection, which included the present model. Art et
Plastic laminate-covered wood, chiseled aluminum.
67 1/4 x 84 5/8 x 19 3/4 in. (170.8 x 214.9 x 50.2 cm)
Industrie, a former gallery in New York, introduced
Produced by Studio Alchimia, Milan, Italy. Studio Alchimia’s furniture to U.S. audiences and
included the present lot in their frst American
Estimate exhibition of the group’s work. The furniture line’s
$12,000-18,000
name ironically references the modernist Bauhaus
Provenance
school of design that promoted minimalist forms
Art et Industrie, New York and functionalism. Sottsass, who worked both
Rick Kaufmann, New York independently as well as in collaboration with Studio
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2002 Alchimia, vehemently rejected this philosophy in favor
of design that exhibited elements of pastiche, humor,
Literature
Kazuko Sato, Alchimia: Never-Ending Italian Design,
and play. The title of the present lot, “Alessandria
Tokyo, 1985, p. 17 for a drawing d’Egitto,” (Alexandria, Egypt) is an example of
Hans Höger, Ettore Sottsass, jun.: Designer, Artist, this whimsical approach to design, recalling the
Architect, Berlin, 1993, p. 94 city’s famous ancient library—an apt reference for
Ronald T. Labaco, Ettore Sottsass: Architect and
a bookshelf. This allusion, paired with Sottsass’s
Designer, exh. cat., Los Angeles County Museum of
Art, Los Angeles, 2006, p. 123
irreverent use of everyday materials and bright colors,
Peter Weiß, Ettore Sottsass: Bau.Haus I, II, Bönen, makes the present lot a now-classic example of
2009, pp. 12, 58 for drawings and p. 59 postmodern Italian design.
62. Yoichi Ohira b. 1946
Yoichi Ohira
Ohira m° L. Serena m° G. Barbini 1 / 1 unico Friday
13 -2-2004 murano.
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Glass art – hard, fragile, cold, and ofen heavy – is not
usually designed to be handled. Yoichi Ohira’s luminous Provenance
blown glass vessels, however, ofer an exception. They Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner
are small and light enough to be turned in one’s hands
like a Wunderkammer specimen, inviting the viewer to
admire his abstracted design vocabulary of gemstones,
polished ivory, veined rocks, shimmering water, agate, 63. Yoichi Ohira b. 1946
moss, and lichens.
Unique “Finestre” vase
Yoichi Ohira graduated from the Kuwasawa Design 1997
Hand-blown glass canes with murrine and
School, Tokyo, in 1969. Shortly thereafer he took up
powder inserts, ground surface.
a glassblowing apprenticeship at the Kagami Crystal 6 1/2 in. (16.5 cm) high
Company, Ltd. In 1973 Ohira moved to Venice to study Executed by Livio Serena, master glassblower, Murano,
at the Accademia di Belle Arti; he graduated in 1978, Italy. Underside incised with artist’s cipher and Yoichi
earning the highest possible grade for his thesis, “The Ohira m° L. Serena 1 / 1 unico 5-11-1997 murano.
Aesthetics of Glass.” In the late 1980s Ohira began
Estimate
collaborating with Murano glassmakers, earning the $5,000-7,000
“Premio Selezione” of the Premio Murano in 1987.
Provenance
Collaboration has always been central to Ohira’s Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner
practice; he has written, “If I might compare myself to a
composer...I could then compare Murano glassmakers
to singers or instrumentalists. Who in the music world
would erase the performers’ names? Thus, my pieces
in all fairness bear, in addition to my signature, the
64. Yoichi Ohira b. 1946
names of those who carried out my instructions: the Unique “Mosaico a Polvere” vase
glassblower and glasscarver, with the date and the 2003
place the piece was made.” Hand-blown glass canes with murrine and
powder inserts.
11 1/2 in. (29.2 cm) high
Executed by Livio Serena, master glassblower,
and Giacomo Barbini, master cutter and grinder,
Murano, Italy. Underside incised with artist’s
cipher and Yoichi Ohira/m° L. Serena/m° G.
Barbini/1 / 1 unico/Friday 04-7-2003/murano.
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
Private collection, United States
Acquired from the above by the present owner
62.
63.
64.
Property from the Collection of Trudie Styler & Sting
“Single-Track”
2008
Stoneware, white pigmented paint.
30 x 31 1/2 x 19 1/2 in. (76.2 x 80 x 49.5 cm)
Base signed and dated EVA HILD 2008.
Estimate
$30,000-40,000
Provenance
Acquired directly from the artist
Sotheby’s, New York, “Fusion: Contemporary Art and
Design,” December 14, 2010, lot 108
Acquired from the above by the present owners
Literature
Love Jönsson and Petter Eklund, Eva Hild,
Stockholm, 2009, illustrated p. 2
Single-Track: An Interview with Eva Hild
Why is clay one of your preferred mediums and how Many collectors may be familiar with your organic
does it enhance your overall design concept? forms in which thin layers of clay delicately envelope
Clay is sticky, heavy, plastic, and multifaceted— and fold onto each other. How has this practice
a wonderful material in every aspect. Clay has been my evolved over the last two decades? And where does
main material since I started my artistic education and Single-Track fall within this trajectory?
career. It has been the prerequisite for my exploration My work is very much connected to my life—the
of themes ending up in sculptural shapes. I like how the everyday practice and overall happenings. It
material can be used in diferent ways and transformed is a constant and slow change and an ongoing
into something totally new and unexpected. I like development. I am continuously exploring my themes
the bodily connection—working with my body, in diferent materials. My starting points could vary,
working with abstract bodies—and the long-term but I do have a red thread in my storytelling. I work
relation during the process, from the frst clay-lump with the material in a close, intimate, planned, and still
to the ready-made sculpture. My shapes have strong intuitive way. It is an interaction between brain, body
spatial and architectural qualities; from smaller clay and material. Single-Track is a sculpture from an early
models I develop my large scale outdoor sculptures stage of the “Loop” series of work, where one line is
in metal materials. moving around in the piece. The structure is open and
airy with a strong and clear movement.
You have described your sculptures as expressive of
both “strength and fragility” as well as “presence and How did you decide on the title Single-Track?
absence.” How does Single-Track represent these I strive for titles that are easy to perceive and that
seemingly contradictory ideas? describe something in the actual sculpture, both
I am fascinated by the relation between inner and outer visually and in content. Preferably I fnd diferent
reality and the dualism between inside and outside. meanings in one word. Single-Track has a strong,
The actual sculpture is the membrane, the in-between. circular movement kept together without deviations.
I use my own life, experiences, and emotions and
describe this relation. On one hand, it is the mass in
thin layers, running in a meandering movement. On
the other hand it is the empty space, air and light
forming the volumes. The construction is really made
of the absent. The clay material also contributes to this
duality. The actual wall of the sculpture is strong and
fragile like an eggshell.
A Symphony of Curves
by Glenn Adamson
Estimate
$1,500-2,500
Provenance
Tomio Koyama Gallery, Tokyo
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Floyd E. Schulze and Robert Klanten, ed., nendo
10/10, Berlin, 2013, n.p.
68. Max Lamb b. 1980
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
Johnson Trading Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2007
Literature
Zoë Ryan, Max Lamb, and Ryan Gander, Max Lamb:
Exercises in Seating, exh. cat., Art Institute of Chicago,
2018, pp. 82, 84, 86-87, 117
“Afer Spring”
designed 1992, executed 1996
Mirror-polished stainless steel.
41 1/2 x 15 x 79 1/4 in. (105.4 x 38.1 x 201.3 cm)
Number 4 from the edition of 5 plus 3 artist’s proofs.
Base incised Ron Arad 4 / 5.
Estimate
$50,000-70,000
Provenance
Private collection, New Jersey
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2015
Literature
Deyan Sudjic, Ron Arad, London, 1999, p. 60
Matthew Collings, Ron Arad Talks to Matthew Collings,
London, 2004, pp. 222-23
Ron Arad: A Retrospective Exhibition, 1981-2001, exh. cat.,
Barry Friedman Ltd., New York, 2005, pp. 54, 101
Paola Antonelli, Jonathan Safran Foer, Marie-Laure Jousset,
Ingeborg de Roode, Ron Arad: No Discipline, exh. cat.,
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 2009, pp. 54-55
Christian Galli, Ron Arad, Milan, 2011, pp. 43-44, 54-55
Estimate
$6,000-8,000
“Miyabi-Fire V”
2006
Hammer-raised and chased fne silver.
10 3/4 in. (27.3 cm) high
Underside impressed with artist’s
monogram HS, purity mark 999, London
town mark, and London date mark g.
Estimate
$20,000-30,000
Provenance
Adrian Sassoon, London
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 2006
Literature
Timothy Schroder, Hiroshi Suzuki,
London, 2005, pp. 60-61
72. Hiroshi Suzuki b. 1961
“Aqua-Poesy VII”
2004
Hammer-raised and chased fne silver.
11 7/8 in. (30.2 cm) high
Underside impressed with artist’s
monogram HS, purity mark 999, London
town mark, and London date mark e.
Estimate
$20,000-30,000
Provenance
Contemporary Applied Arts, London
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 2004
Literature
Timothy Schroder, Hiroshi Suzuki,
London, 2005, p. 25
73. Alexander Calder 1898-1976
Estimate
$45,000-65,000
Provenance
Perls Galleries, New York
Sculpture to Wear, New York, 1973
William Ehrlich Gallery, New York, 1978
Aviva and Jacob Baal-Teshuva, New York
Sotheby’s, New York, “An Artistic Home:
The Collection of Aviva & Jacob Baal-Teshuva,”
December 13, 2016, lot 1
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Teapot Exhibited
circa 1995 “Contemporary British Studio Ceramics:
Porcelain, celadon glaze, galvanized metal. The Grainer Collection,” The Mint Museum
8 1/4 in. (21 cm) high, including handle of Craf + Design, Charlotte, North
Side impressed with inventory mark Carolina, October 1, 2010-March 13, 2011
under the glaze.
Literature
Estimate Annie Carlano, ed., Contemporary British
$3,000-4,000 Studio Ceramics, exh. cat., Mint Museum
of Craf + Design, New Haven, 2010,
Provenance illustrated p. 165
Contemporary Applied Arts, London
Acquired from the above by the present
owners, 1995
Property from the Collection of Diane and
Marc Grainer
“Untitled”
2015
Wood-fred porcelain.
12 1/2 in. (31.8 cm) high
Estimate
$2,000-3,000
Provenance
Tomio Koyama Gallery, Tokyo
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Whereas many contemporary ceramists rely on gas or 78. Taro Tabuchi b. 1977
electric-powered kilns, Japanese artist Taro Tabuchi
builds his own furnaces and uses local woods to fre “Barbaric White”
his pottery over a three-day period. Though this 2015
Wood-fred porcelain.
traditional fring method dates back to the 5th century,
10 5/8 in. (27 cm) high
the results are far from traditional. Historically, many
Japanese ceramists have created wares that feature Estimate
planes of solid color. In Tabuchi’s work, though, he $2,000-3,000
prefers to rely on chance to create beautiful abstract
Provenance
patterns. The ashes and the fre from the kiln create
Tomio Koyama Gallery, Tokyo
varied arrangements of pastel hues on the pottery’s Acquired from the above by the
surface. His forms range from traditional, as seen present owner
in the “Untitled” vase, to more sculptural, inventive
forms, such as the conical “Barbaric White.” Tabuchi
has received critical acclaim throughout his native
Japan and has been featured in both solo and group
exhibitions across Asia, though this is the frst ofering
of his work on the secondary market.
79. Wendell Castle 1932-2018
Estimate
$25,000-35,000
Provenance
Private Collection, Rochester, New York
Moderne Gallery, Philadelphia
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Emily Evans Eerdmans, Wendell Castle: A
Catalogue Raisonné, 1958-2012, New York, 2014,
pp. 178-79 for similar examples
Property from a Private Collection, Texas
Small vessel
circa 1977
Hammered, enameled, and patinated copper with
electroplated texture.
4 7/8 in. (12.4 cm) high, 8 in. (20.3 cm) diameter
Side of vessel incised Schwarcz/735 and the
underside with 735/Schwarcz in pen on paper label.
Estimate
$2,000-3,000
Provenance
Private collection, Miami, acquired directly from
the artist, 1980s
Thence by descent to the present owner, 2018
Literature
Bernard N. Jazzar and Harold B. Nelson, June
Schwarcz: Invention & Variation, Washington, D.C.,
2017, p. 60 for a similar example
“Black Bowl”
circa 1985
Scorched and painted oak burl.
6 3/4 in. (17.1 cm) high
Underside impressed J.B. PARTRIDGE.
Estimate
$1,500-2,500
Provenance
Contemporary Applied Arts, London
Acquired from the above by the present
owners, 1991
Literature
Alison Britton and Katherine Swif, Jim
Partridge, Manchester, 2003, pp. 20, 68, 80
for similar examples
Property from the Collection of Diane and
Marc Grainer
Estimate Literature
$2,000-3,000 Ceramic Pieces by Colin Pearson, exh. cat.,
Fine Arts Gallery, University Centre, Sandy
Provenance Bay, 1981, n.p. for a similar example
Galerie Besson, London “British Ceramics in Boston,” Ceramics
Acquired from the above by the present Monthly, December 1984, p. 29 for a
owners, 1995 similar example
Oliver Watson, Studio Pottery: Twentieth
Century British Ceramics in the Victoria and
Albert Museum Collection, London, 1993,
pp. 11, 225 for a similar example
Property from the Collection of Diane and
Marc Grainer
Literature
Nicholas Homoky, Nicholas Homoky, Somerset,
1997, teapot illustrated p. 37
Emmanuel Cooper, “Nicholas Homoky,”
Ceramic Review, no. 170, April 1998, teapot
illustrated p. 45
Property from the Collection of Diane and
Marc Grainer
Estimate
$3,000-4,000
Provenance
Barrett Marsden Gallery, London
Acquired from the above by the present
owners, 1999
Literature
Twenty-fve Years: Crafs Council Shop at the
Victoria & Albert Museum, exh. cat., Victoria &
Albert Museum, London, 1999, illustrated p. 12
Gordon Baldwin, exh. pamphlet, Barrett
Marsden Gallery, London, 1999, illustrated n.p.
“Cloudscape”
1998
Earthenware, painted slip.
13 3/8 in. (34 cm) high
Underside signed in glaze GB/98.
Estimate
$3,000-4,000
Provenance
Barrett Marsden Gallery, London
Acquired from the above by the present
owners, 1998
Exhibited
“Contemporary British Studio Ceramics: The
Grainer Collection,” The Mint Museum of Craf
+ Design, Charlotte, North Carolina, October 1,
2010-March 13, 2011
Literature
Peter Saunders, “Gordon Baldwin’s Silent
Clay,” Ceramics: Art & Perception, no. 39,
2000, illustrated p. 40
Michael Hardy, Handbuilding, London, 2000,
illustrated p. 53
Σ 86. Joaquim Tenreiro 1906-1992
Settee
circa 1958
Brazilian rosewood, cane.
26 1/4 x 70 x 23 1/2 in. (66.7 x 177.8 x 59.7 cm)
Estimate
$20,000-30,000
Provenance
Private collection, Rio de Janeiro
Literature
Ronaldo do Rego Macedo, Joaquim Tenreiro:
Madeira/Arte e Design, Rio de Janeiro, 1985, p. 40
Soraia Cals, Tenreiro, Rio de Janeiro, 1998, p. 114
Aric Chen, Brazil Modern: The Rediscovery
of Twentieth-Century Brazilian Furniture,
New York, 2016, p. 63
Maria Cecília Loschiavo dos Santos and Tatiana
Sakurai, Móvel Moderno Brasileiro, São Paulo,
2017, pp. 70-71
87. Joaquim Tenreiro 1906-1992
Estimate Estimate
$4,000-6,000 $4,000-6,000
Provenance Provenance
New Crafsman Gallery, St. Ives New Crafsman Gallery, St. Ives
Acquired from the above by the present Acquired from the above by the present
owners, circa 1996 owners, circa 1996
Exhibited Exhibited
“Contemporary British Studio Ceramics: The “Contemporary British Studio Ceramics: The
Grainer Collection,” The Mint Museum of Craf Grainer Collection,” The Mint Museum of Craf
+ Design, Charlotte, North Carolina, October 1, + Design, Charlotte, North Carolina, October 1,
2010-March 13, 2011 2010-March 13, 2011
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
New Crafsman Gallery, St. Ives
Acquired from the above by the present
owners, 1988
Exhibited
“Contemporary British Studio Ceramics: The
Grainer Collection,” The Mint Museum of Craf
+ Design, Charlotte, North Carolina, October 1,
2010-March 13, 2011
90.
88.
89.
Property from a Private Collection, New Jersey
“Minguren I” table
1985
American black walnut, East Indian rosewood.
29 1/2 x 72 1/2 x 43 in. (74.9 x 184.2 x 109.2 cm)
Underside signed in marker George Nakashima
June 6 1985 and Fenimore. Together with a drawing
of the table by George Nakashima, a copy of the
original order card, and a certifcate of authenticity
from Mira Nakashima.
Estimate
$40,000-60,000
Provenance
Dr. James A. Fenimore, Houston
Private collection
Wright, Chicago, “Important Design,”
June 6, 2013, lot 113
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
George Nakashima, The Soul of a Tree, A
Woodworker’s Refections, Tokyo, 1981, pp. 156,
173, 182 for similar examples
Mira Nakashima, Nature, Form & Spirit: The Life
and Legacy of George Nakashima, New York, 2003,
pp. 200, 202 for similar examples
92. Isamu Noguchi 1904-1988
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Provenance
Piasa, Paris, “American Design,” May 30, 2018, lot 57
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Frank Lloyd Wright, The Natural House, New York,
1954, p. 173
Property from an Important Collection
Console table
1970s
Cerejeira.
31 x 78 1/4 x 21 in. (78.7 x 198.8 x 53.3 cm)
Produced by the Zanine workshop, Nova
Viçosa, Bahia, Brazil. Tabletop with brass plate
marked Zanine.
Estimate
$15,000-20,000
Provenance
Galerie Patrick Fourtin, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 2006
Literature
Amanda Beatriz Palma de Carvalho, José
Zanine Caldas, São Paulo, 2019, p. 274
95. Donald Colfesh b. 1932
Estimate
$6,000-8,000
Literature
Jewel Stern, Modernism in American Silver:
20th Century Design, exh. cat., Dallas Museum of
Art, Da, 2005, pp. 257-63 for a discussion on the
“Circa ‘70” line
Though the present lot belongs to a line of silver 1961 advertisement in The New Yorker predicted: “An
hollowware called “Circa ’70,” Donald Colfesh designed inspiring design, this modern sterling has a timeless
the pieces for Gorham Manufacturing Company more quality that makes it a joy to own today, tomorrow,
than a decade earlier. This title alludes to the futurism forever.” The “Circa ‘70” line also included a tea and
of his forms. The sleek lines of the slender decanter cofee set, but the decanter and cordial glass are rarer
and the attenuated conical cordials almost look like examples of the “Circa ‘70” line. An example of the
spaceships, surely an inspiration for the young designer present model decanter and cordial belong to the
during the “Space Race.” Though the aesthetics permanent collections of the Brooklyn Museum of Art
of the present lot refect a particular zeitgeist, the and the Dallas Museum of Art.
forms have remained strikingly modern. Just as a
96. Gio Ponti 1891-1979
Estimate
$12,000-18,000
Property from a Private Collection, United States Property from a Private Collection, United States
97. Charles Eames and Ray Eames 98. Isamu Noguchi 1904-1988
1907-1978 and 1912-1988
“Cyclone” dining table, model no. 311
circa 1957
Pair of “DAR” armchairs
Plastic laminate, birch plywood, chrome-plated steel,
circa 1953
enameled steel.
Molded fberglass, painted steel, rubber.
28 3/8 in. (72.1 cm) high, 35 3/4 in. (90.8 cm) diameter
Each: 31 5/8 x 24 3/4 x 23 1/4 in. (80.3 x 62.9 x 59.1 cm)
Manufactured by Knoll Associates, New York, New York.
Manufactured by Herman Miller Furniture
Company, Zeeland, Michigan. Underside of each
Estimate
armchair with manufacturer’s paper label printed
$800-1,200
herman miller/furniture company/zeeland/
michigan and DESIGNED BY/CHARLES EAMES.
Literature
Nancy Grove and Diane Botnick, The Sculpture of
Estimate
Isamu Noguchi, 1924-1979: A Catalogue, New York,
$1,000-1,500
1980, fg. 815A for a similar example
Alexander von Vegesack, et al., eds., Isamu Noguchi,
Literature
Sculptural Design, exh. cat., Vitra Design Museum,
John Neuhart, Marilyn Neuhart and Ray Eames,
Weil am Rhein, 2001, p. 129 for a similar example
Eames Design: The Work of the Ofce of Charles
and Ray Eames, New York, 1989, p. 140
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Literature
John Neuhart, Marilyn Neuhart and Ray Eames,
Eames Design: The Work of the Ofce of Charles
and Ray Eames, New York, 1989, p. 129
Herbert Bayer Tapestries
by Lissa Ballinger, Curator at the Aspen Institute
“Being a woman, I was given interiors,” Shu said. She started At the height of her career, and afer designing thousands of ofce
moonlighting for Hans Knoll as a drafsman and eventually joined interiors, she resigned from Knoll in 1965. At only 48 years old, she
his company as the director of the Knoll Planning Unit, later had profoundly infuenced post-World War II design by defning the
becoming partner and co-owner. One of her frst projects was to look for corporate interiors during the 1950s and 1960s and
do the interiors for Secretary of War Henry Stimson—the frst of promoting the “open ofce” workspace. She is one of the most
many government projects. “It was an exciting time, but it was infuential architects and designers of post-war America, and she
mostly hard work. We had to battle the prejudices against made designers like Saarinen and van der Rohe famous for their
contemporary design,” she said. furniture—designs that are today considered classics (along with
her own pieces)—and still being used in contemporary interiors.
Shu transformed the feld of “interior design” from interior She had a curatorial eye for identifying talent and great works of art
decoration to spatial architecture—which in the 1950s was almost that she integrated both in her showrooms and in her homes.
completely dominated by men. She collaborated with the most
important mid-century modern architects, including Philip Shu was of the belief that art was to be lived with and enjoyed on a
Johnson, Gordon Bunshaf and Marcel Breuer, designing their daily basis, rather than something kept hidden away in storage.
interiors which were rooted in practical needs and rigorous spatial Now, Phillips ofers the rare opportunity to share in the joy and
planning. Her showrooms for Knoll became laboratories for memories that Shu experienced over an incredible life of art and
contemporary design on how we could live and work, and came to design. When mid-century modern furniture was having a
represent her signature “Knoll look” that would epitomize the resurgence, Shu ofen came across her own furniture when perusing
style of the 1950s. Her location at 575 Madison Avenue was one of auction catalogues. With her wit and dry sense of humor she would
the frst to incorporate contemporary art and included pieces jokingly say to me: “You know, Paul, I’m an antique now.”
from artists with whom she had personal friendships. She
—Paul Makovsky, Critic and Curator
Paul Makovsky is a writer based in New York City. He is the Editor-in-Chief of Contract
Magazine, a publication dedicated to architecture and design. Makovsky has curated
countless exhibitions about art and design, including “Knoll Textiles: 1945–2010” at
the Bard Graduate Center, and was a contributor to the accompanying catalogue
published by Yale University Press. He was a close friend of Florence Knoll Bassett and
is currently writing a biography of her life and work.
Consider the Weathervane
It may seem surprising that Florence Knoll Bassett, the At the same time, the magazine Art in America, with the
pioneer of the sleek aesthetic that came to defne the dedicated folk art collector Jean Lipman at the helm,
postwar American ofce interior, collected nineteenth- published articles about the leading contemporary artists
century weathervanes. What place, exactly, did these of the time alongside articles on Shaker design and New
trotting horses, glistening gilded fowl, and verdigris- England gravestones. Albert Barnes’s installations of Van
patinated roosters have in the home of one of the leading Goghs and Matisses next to ornamental strap hinges
exponents of modernism? come to mind as a visual of the same approach of
conferring non-traditional art an equal footing with
Though these sculptures may seem incongruous, it’s modern masters.
worth remembering that so-called primitive art and
modernism go way back. Wassily Kandinsky mined Among these writings for Art in America, an article
Russian folk art for inspiration while Picasso and other published by Alice Winchester titled “Antiques for the
artists working in Paris collected African carvings. Avant Garde” (1961) is of particular relevance. “There
Meanwhile in New York, artists such as Elie Nadelman and seems to be today among people of advanced taste,” she
Charles Sheeler, looking to defne a distinctly American wrote, “a considerable interest in antiques. Dwellers in
brand of modernism, found their native artistic roots in glass houses, for instance, will fll them with period
early American folk art. As Helen Appleton Read wrote for furniture.” Listing nineteenth-century American
the Brooklyn Daily Eagle in 1924, “A group of our younger weathervanes among the potential objects for inspiration
artists…have poked about in antique shops, in old saloons she continued, “Such things stir modern taste not because
and chophouses and brought back quaint pictures and of their age but in spite of it, and are appreciated not for
statues. These are now serving as decorations and quality or rarity but because they ‘look modern.’”
inspiration in the studios of many of them. Why bother
about French Gothic or the frescoes of Santa Croce when While Florence Knoll Bassett does not seem to have
we have material primitive at hand that has the humor included weathervanes in any of her ofce interiors, they
and tang of our native soil?” do appear in images of her summer home in Vermont. She
acquired the vanes in Vermont as well as in the many
Into the late 1950s, which is when Florence discovered antiques stores located near the Knoll showroom in
weathervanes “on a whim” while on a trip to Paris with her midtown Manhattan and treasured her collection enough
second husband Harry Hood Bassett, early America to bring it with her when she and Bassett relocated to
continued to serve as inspiration for American artists as Coral Gables, Florida, in 1965 and fnally to her last
well as prominent collectors such as Abby and John residence in Coconut Grove, where she displayed a group
Rockefeller. To name a few, David Smith had drawn on to striking efect in a custom grid-shaped display. “Cocks
farm implements and machinery parts gleaned from his have always been seen, but never as well as in American
upstate New York property for his “Agricola” series of the weathervanes,” Pablo Picasso said, and we might well add
1950s, while Andrew Wyeth represented rural America in that weathervanes have never been as well seen as in the
an entirely diferent manner. home of Florence Knoll Bassett.
○ 101. Possibly by W.A. Snow Iron Works,
Boston, Massachusetts
A large full-bodied molded gilt copper
“Hackney” horse weathervane
late 19th/early 20th century
36 in. (91.4 cm) high
Length hoof to hoof: 48 in. (121.9 cm)
Length of bar: 51 1/2 in. (130.8 cm)
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
○ 102. Attributed to A.L. Jewell,
Waltham, Massachusetts
A full-bodied molded gilt copper
Peacock weathervane
1850-1877
With pressed and gilt sheet copper tail.
22 in. (55.9 cm) high
Length beak to tail: 38 in. (96.5 cm)
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
○ 103. Possibly by J.W. Fiske, ○ 104. In the Manner of
New York, New York Harry Leech, Woburn,
A full-bodied molded copper and zinc
Massachusetts
“Horse and Hoop” weathervane
A carved painted and giltwood dog
circa 1880
weathervane mold
With zinc head and pressed sheet
19th century
mane and tail.
17 1/2 in. (44.5 cm) high
Body: 12 1/4 in. (31.1 cm) high, 28 1/2 in.
Length nose to tail: 36 in. (91.4 cm)
(72.4 cm) long
Hoop: 15 in. (38.1 cm) high, 15 1/2 in.
Estimate
(39.4 cm) wide
$20,000-30,000
Estimate
$3,000-4,000
“I am not a decorator. The only place
I decorate is my own house.”
Florence Knoll Bassett
Opposite/below:
Entryway towards the living
room of Florence Knoll’s home,
Coral Gables, Florida. Image
courtesy of Florence Knoll
Bassett papers, 1932-2000.
Archives of American Art,
Smithsonian Institution.
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
○ 106. American ○ 107. Attributed to Rochester
A full-bodied molded copper
Iron Works, Rochester,
gamecock weathervane New Hampshire
circa 1875
With pressed sheet copper tail. A large full-bodied molded and cast-iron
18 in. (45.7 cm) high, 17 3/4 in. (45.1 cm) long Rooster weathervane
late 19th century
Estimate With sheet iron tail.
$3,000-5,000 Excluding stand: 30 in. (76.2 cm) high
Beak to tail: 36 in. (91.4 cm)
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
○ 108. American
A primitive sheet iron stag weathervane
Third quarter 19th century
With iron bracing on one side.
31 in. (78.7 cm) high, 22 1/2 in. (57.2 cm) long
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Property from an Important Collection
Floor lamp
circa 1937
Aluminum, nickel-plated brass, steel.
47 1/2 in. (120.7 cm) high
Produced by Louis Poulsen, Copenhagen,
Denmark.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
WYETH, Sagaponack
Sotheby’s, New York, “WYETH: The Art of
Timeless Design,” June 6, 2017, lot 447
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
“Den lille lejlighed,” Nyt Tidsskrif For
Kunstindustri, no. 5, May 1937, p. 99
Grete Jalk, Dansk Møbelkunst gennem 40 aar,
vol. 2: 1937-1946, Denmark, 1987, pp. 9, 35
110. Hans J. Wegner 1914-2007
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
Private collection, Virginia, 1964
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Af Bent Salicath, “Købestævnet - idé og virkelighed,”
Dansk Kunsthaandværk, no. 34, 1961, p. 67
Johan Møller Nielsen, Wegner: en dansk
møbelkunstner, Copenhagen, 1965, pp. 11, 71-72
Christian Holmsted Olesen, WEGNER: just one
good chair, exh. cat., Design Museum Denmark,
Copenhagen, 2014, pp. 79, 82, 210-11
Property from a Private Manhattan Collection
111. Finn Juhl 1912-1989 Literature The present model was exhibited at the
Erik Wørts, “Den syvogtyvende,” Dansk Copenhagen Cabinetmakers’ Guild Exhibition
Pair of armchairs, model no. FJ 53 Kunsthaandværk, no. 11, November 1953, p. 181
at Design Museum Denmark, 1953.
circa 1953 Esbjørn Hiort, Modern Danish Furniture,
Teak, fabric upholstery, brass. New York, 1956, p. 62
Each: 29 3/4 x 28 1/4 x 30 in. (75.6 x 71.8 x 76.2 cm) Grete Jalk, ed., Dansk Møbelkunst gennem 40
Executed by master cabinetmaker Niels aar, Volume 3: 1947-1956, Copenhagen, 1987,
Vodder, Copenhagen, Denmark. Underside with pp. 271-72, 311
retailer’s brass plaque impressed with ILLUMS Esbjørn Hiort, Finn Juhl: Furniture, Architecture,
BOLIGHUS/KØBENHAVN. Applied Art, Copenhagen, 1990, pp. 58-59
Patricia Yamada, ed., Finn Juhl Memorial
Estimate Exhibition, exh. cat., Gallery “Air Molèk Kota,”
$20,000-30,000 Osaka, 1990, pp. 76-79 and p. 139 for a drawing
Noritsugu Oda, Danish Chairs, San Francisco,
1999, p. 98 and p. 99 for a drawing
112. Finn Juhl 1912-1989
Provenance
Private collection, New York The present model was exhibited at the
Acquired from the above by the present “Copenhagen Cabinetmakers’ Guild,”
owner, 2019
Kunstindustrimuseet, Copenhagen,
September 28-October 14, 1945, stand 14.
Property from a Private Manhattan Collection
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Property of a Distinguished Collector
Table
circa 1925
Walnut-veneered wood, brass inlay.
28 1/2 x 53 7/8 x 23 7/8 in. (72.4 x 136.8 x 60.6 cm)
Probably produced by Svenska
Möbelfabrikerna, Bodafors, Sweden.
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Provenance
Galerie Eric Philippe, Paris
Barry Friedman Ltd., New York
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 2002
Property from the Collection of Diane and Marc Grainer
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
Helsingin Suomalainen Yhteiskoulu, Helsinki
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Kati Salonen and Mona Schalin Architects,
Entinen Helsingin Suomalainen Yhteiskoulu
Rakennushistorian selvitys, Helsinki, 2012,
pp. 28, 40-41, 66, 150
Estimate
$25,000-35,000
Provenance
Hostler Burrows, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Christian Björk, Thomas Ekström and Eric
Ericson, Axel Einar Hjorth: Möbelarkitekt,
Stockholm, 2009, pp. 126-133 for a discussion
of the series
Important Works from the
Ann and Robert
Fromer Collection
Paul Jeanneney
Paul Jeanneney was an avid ceramist as well as a 121. Paul Jeanneney 1861-1920
collector of art and design. Early in his career, he began
to acquire works by his contemporaries such as Pierre- Gourd-form vase
Adrien Dalpayrat and Auguste Delaherche, artists circa 1900
Glazed stoneware with peau de serpent efect.
whose work is also included in the present ofering. To
6 in. (15.2 cm) high
his collection, Jeanneny added objects from countries Underside incised Jeanneney.
such as China, Korea, and Japan. The confuence of
Eastern artifacts with contemporary works (which drew Estimate
from Asian pottery, themselves) greatly infuenced $4,000-6,000
Gourd-form vase
1904
Glazed stoneware with peau de serpent efect.
5 3/4 in. (14.6 cm) high
Underside incised Jeanneney/St. Amand/1904.
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1985
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1985
Large vase
1903
Glazed stoneware.
9 7/8 in. (25.1 cm) high
Underside incised Jeanneney/1903.
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1985
125. Pierre-Adrien Dalpayrat 1844-1910
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1985
Gourd-form vase
circa 1900
Glazed stoneware.
6 7/8 in. (17.5 cm) high
Underside incised G. Méténier.
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present owner,
circa 1985
Literature
Paul Arthur, Art Nouveau Ceramics: An Illustrated
Dictionary, Paris, 2015, p. 273 for a similar example
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1985
Literature
Auguste Delaherche: Rêves d’argile, secrets d’émail,
exh. cat., Fondation Neumann, Gingins, Switzerland,
2001, p. 28 for a similar example
Estimate
$2,000-3,000
Provenance
Christie’s, New York, “Important 20th Century
Decorative Arts,” June 6, 1992, lot 134
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Taxile Doat
Estimate
$8,000-12,000
Provenance
Macklowe Gallery & Modernism, New York
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 1988
Estimate
$12,000-18,000
Provenance
Jason Jacques Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2003
Literature
Taxile Doat, “Les Céramiques de Grand Feu:
La Porcelaine dure et le Grès-Cérame,” Art et
Decoration, Tome XX, July-December 1906, p. 154
Irene Sargent, “Taxile Doat,” Keramic Studio, no. 8,
December 1906, p. 172
Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salons 1895-1914, Volume
IV: Ceramics and Glass, Woodbridge, 1998, p. 190
132. Taxile Doat 1851-1939
Estimate
$12,000-18,000
Provenance
Jason Jacques Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 2003
Literature
M.P. Verneuil, “Taxile Doat: Céramiste,” Art
et Décoration, September 1904, p. 85 for a
similar example
Plaque
1932
Glazed porcelain with pâte-sur-pâte
decoration.
6 1/2 in. (16.5 cm) diameter
With artist’s monogram in the
central medallion. Reverse signed
T DOAT/1932/Sèvres.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 1985
Estimate
$7,000-9,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 1980s
Literature
A. Le Chatelier, “Céramique d’Art,” Art et
Décoration, December 1899, p. 188
Paul Arthur, French Art Nouveau Ceramics:
An Illustrated Dictionary, Paris, 2015, p. 223
Illustration of ceramics by
Edmund Lachenal from Art
et DŽcoration, circa 1899.
135. Auguste Delaherche 1857-1940
Large vase
1887-1894
Glazed stoneware.
12 1/4 in. (31.1 cm) high
Underside impressed with artist’s seal and
numbered 1619.
Estimate
$7,000-9,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, circa 1985
Literature
Émile Molinier, “La Céramique a l’Exposition
Universelle de 1889,” L’Art Revue
Bi-Mensuelle Illustrée, Tome II, 1889,
p. 254 for a similar example
Dish
circa 1900
Glazed stoneware.
10 1/2 in. (26.7 cm) diameter
Underside painted Bigot and 340 and
incised with indecipherable number.
Estimate
$3,000-5,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 1985
Literature
Jason Jacques, Exotica, Lenox, MA,
2010, p. 261
Estimate
$12,000-18,000
Provenance
Macklowe Gallery & Modernism, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1988
Literature
François Guillaume Dumas, Revue de l’Exposition
Universelle de 1889, Vol. II, Paris, 1889, p. 259
René Ménard, “Auguste Delaherche,” Art et
Décoration, February 1906, p. 57
Auguste Delaherche: Rêves d’argile, secrets
d’émail, exh. cat., Fondation Neumann, Gingins,
Switzerland, 2001, p. 21
David A. Brenneman, et al., Paris in the Age of
Impressionism: Masterworks from the Musée
d’Orsay, exh. cat., High Museum of Art, Atlanta,
2002, p. 127
In 1889, Auguste Delaherche won a gold medal at the
Exposition Universelle in Paris, where he showcased
ceramic vases with peacock feather decorations,
including the present model. This presentation
established Delaherche as one of preeminent ceramists
of his generation and helped to usher in the Art Nouveau
style. Later in his career, Delaherche preferred to use
drip glazes rather than representational imagery, but
the style of his work remained indebted to Eastern
infuences. These works demonstrate a shif from the
fgural to the abstract in Delaherche’s œuvre, and they
reveal mastery at each iteration of his artistic practice.
Bottle
circa 1930
Glazed stoneware.
7 5/8 in. (19.4 cm) high
Underside impressed with artist’s monogram,
fsh stamp, and calligraphic mark.
Estimate
$4,000-6,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 1985
Literature
Robert Koch, Louis C. Tifany: The Collected
Works of Robert Koch, Atglen, PA, 2001, p. 115
Martin Eidelberg, Tifany Favrile Pottery and the
Quest of Beauty, New York, 2010, p. 23
Estimate
$20,000-30,000
Provenance
Sotheby’s, New York, “20th Century
Decorative Arts,” March 21, 1992, lot 203
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Martin Eidelberg and Nancy A. McClelland,
Behind the Scenes of Tifany Glassmaking: The
Nash Notebooks, New York, 2000, p. 177
Martin Eidelberg, Tifany Favrile Pottery and
the Quest of Beauty, New York, 2010, p. 94
Estimate
$7,000-9,000
Provenance
Lillian Nassau, New York
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 1988
Literature
Martin Eidelberg, Tifany Favrile Pottery
and the Quest of Beauty, New York, 2010,
pp. 40, 85
Estimate
$2,000-3,000
Provenance
Alain Cical, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, circa 1985
Literature
Albert Dulac, “Une Visite à André Méthey,”
L’Art et les Artistes, no. 72, March 1911,
p. 260 for similar examples
Vase
1926
Glazed stoneware.
13 5/8 in. (34.6 cm) high
Underside painted 1926, incised with
artist’s cipher, and with remnants of a
period paper label.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Macklowe Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 2004
Literature
Gérard Landrot, Mayodon, Paris, 2004,
pp. 202-7 for similar examples
Estimate
$15,000-20,000
Provenance
DeLorenzo Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 1986
Literature
Janine Bloch-Dermant, G. Argy-Rousseau:
Glassware as Art, Paris, 1991, pp. 59, 191
Estimate
$7,000-9,000
Provenance
Macklowe Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 1982
Estimate
$7,000-9,000
Provenance
Mina Rosenblatt Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present
owner, 1982
The following three lots are from a set of furnishings In 1915 Adolph Lewisohn commissioned C.P.H. Gilbert to
designed by Claggett Wilson (1887-1952) for the renovate his 881 Fifh Avenue residence, and it was on a
dining room of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lewisohn. Wealthy foor of this mansion that the young Sam and Margaret
and progressive young members of New York society, Lewisohn established their home. They enlisted Claggett
the Lewisohns found in Wilson a creative partner who Wilson to convert a former governess’s room into a dining
conceived a highly original interior scheme. Discovered room that would draw inspiration from and complement
in the 1970s and held in private collections until now, their modern art collection. An article about the dining
this is the frst time the present suite of furniture has room by Wilson’s friend and colleague Augusta Owen
come to public market since 1939. Patterson appeared in the June 15, 1930 issue of Town
and Country and praised its thoughtful and modernist
Sam Lewisohn (1884-1951) was the son of Adolph approach which provided an elegant backdrop to the
Lewisohn (1849-1938), patriarch of the New York Lewisohn’s exceptional paintings and views of Central
branch of the Lewisohn family. Lewisohn senior Park. An article about Claggett Wilson, probably published
arrived in the United States in 1867 to join his brothers circa 1933 in the Boston Evening Transcript (a photocopy
in the New York branch of his family’s business, the survives in the archives of one of Wilson’s heirs), quotes
origins of which dated to 18th century Hamburg. Henri Matisse remarking on the room: “It is perhaps the
The various Lewisohn enterprises dealt primarily in most ideal background for my paintings I have yet seen.”
animal-based products and in New York expanded to
include metals. Within a few decades the brothers had Wilson was a modernist American artist best known for
become extraordinarily successful in copper mining, his work documenting World War I, for which he was
processing, and trading. Adolph Lewisohn established nominated for a Nobel Prize. His paintings are now in the
himself in American society through his advocacy and collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum
philanthropy, his political afliations, and not least of and The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Like many artists
all, his art collecting. Sam Lewisohn followed in his in New York at this time, Wilson did not discriminate
father’s footsteps as a prominent businessman and among mediums, and in addition to painting and
philanthropist, and together with his wife Margaret illustrating, he also designed costumes and sets. The
Valentine Seligman (1895-1954), an accomplished Lewisohn dining room has been falsely described as
advocate for education and patron of the arts in her his only known residential commission, when in fact he
own right, also amassed a considerable art collection. also worked as an interior decorator, painting murals
Works from the Lewisohn family collections are and selecting interior furnishings for clients such as the
in the permanent collections of a number of New actors Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne. The diversity of
York museums, including the Brooklyn Museum, his projects suggests he may have designed other pieces
The Museum of Modern Art, and The Metropolitan of furniture in addition to those for the Lewisohn dining
Museum of Art. room, now the only known extant examples.
Dining room of Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Lewisohn, New York,
as seen in Town & Country
magazine, June 15th, 1930.
Photograph by Sara Parsons.
Wilson’s theatre design background was apparent in Amidst this glamorous setting, the present dining room
the iridescent walls (silver leaf applied with “transparent suite of sideboard, dining table, and chairs took center
blue green lacquer”), the upper silvered geometric stage. Each displays a motif of interlocking cactus-
molding behind which uplights illuminated a yellow inspired ovals, evocative of the Opuntia (paddle) cacti
ceiling, and window niches containing large cactus situated in the window niches. The motif is expressed
plants framed by silver gauze curtains with appliques in an openwork design on the chair backs and table
in blue, pink and green. A Paul Cézanne still life with base and as satinwood marquetry on the sideboard.
fruit was literally and fguratively refected in a fruit- The metal drawer pulls of the sideboard, which were
flled, mirrored and lacquered glass surtout de table, also used as the door handles, are formed as overlaid
also designed by Wilson. The whereabouts of this ovals framed with the tiny points of cactus needles.
centerpiece as well as a set of chromium-plated and
enameled candlesticks also by Wilson remain unknown.
Sideboard
circa 1930
Birds-eye maple and satinwood-veneered
wood, nickel-plated bronze.
39 x 74 3/8 x 17 1/2 in. (99.1 x 188.9 x 44.5 cm)
Estimate
$18,000-24,000
Provenance
Samuel Adolph and Margaret Valentine Lewisohn,
New York, circa 1930
Parke-Bernet Galleries, Inc., New York, May 17, 1939,
lot 426 (partial)
William Henry Vanderbilt III
Thence by descent
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1970s
Literature
Augusta Owen Patterson, “The Decorative Arts,”
Town & Country, June 15, 1930, illustrated p. 68
Property from a San Francisco Collection
Literature
Augusta Owen Patterson, “The Decorative Arts,”
Town & Country, June 15, 1930, illustrated pp. 67, 69
154. Jean Després 1889-1980
Pair of vases
circa 1970
Silver-plated brass.
Each: 18 3/4 x 7 1/2 x 7 1/2 in. (47.6 x 19.1 x 19.1 cm)
Underside of each incised J-Després.
Estimate
$12,000-18,000
Provenance
Private collection, Texas
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Melissa Gabardi, Jean Després: Jeweler, Maker
and Designer of the Machine Age, London, 2009,
p. 136 for a similar example
Estimate
$7,000-9,000
Provenance
Private collection, Forlì
Paul Lester Wiener, living room of
Literature Dr. Fritz Wittels with the present
Gio Ponti, “Cronache Americane,” Domus, model armchair, New York, circa 1934.
no. 95, November 1935, p. 11 Photograph by Fay S. Lincoln. Used
with permission from the Fay S. Lincoln
photograph collection (1628), Eberly
Family Special Collections Library, Penn
State University Libraries.
In 1934, Paul Lester Wiener designed the present
model armchair for Dr. Fritz Wittels’ living room in
New York City. Dr. Wittels, an early proponent of
psychoanalysis and the frst biographer of Sigmund
Freud, commissioned Wiener to design a modern
apartment that would also serve as a reception and
treatment area for his patients. As such, Wiener’s
designs were made with their psychological value and
efect in mind. The apartment was primarily white
with blue and red accents, and much of the furniture
relied on geometric and architectonic forms. The
present model chair, which was originally lacquered
red, ft perfectly within this design scheme. In the
November 1935 issue of Domus, Gio Ponti praised
Wiener’s modern design and described him as a model
for the avant-garde in the United States. Later in his
career, Paul Lester Wiener achieved eminence for his
collaboration with Le Corbusier on urban planning
projects in South America and for redeveloping the
Washington Square Park area of New York City in 1958.
156. Eckart Muthesius 1904-1989
Estimate
$30,000-40,000 Eckart Muthesius, bar room of the
Manik Bagh Palace, Indore, circa 1931.
Provenance Artwork © 2019 Artists Rights Society
(ARS), New York/VG Bild Kunst, Bonn.
Maharaja Yeshwant Rao Holkar II of Indore, circa 1931
Bina Kilachand, Mumbai
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2017
Literature
Reto Niggl, Eckart Muthesius 1930: The Maharaja’s
Palace in Indore, Architecture and Interior,
Stuttgart, 1996, p. 98
Eckart Muthesius was just twenty-fve years old Thonet’s production of certain models for Le Corbusier,
when he met Yeshwant Rao Holkar II at a garden Perriand, and Jeanneret numbered in the mere
party hosted by the Maharaja in Oxford, England and hundreds. Muthesius designed the present pair of
subsequently won the commission to design and bar stools for the palace’s cocktail bar, and while the
decorate his palace. Muthesius recalled years later that manufacturer he worked with in Berlin is no longer
“It was like a fairy tale. Three hours later I had the order known, only a handful of examples were created.
for the entire palace in my pocket.”
In 1989 the design went into production with Vereinigte
This fairy tale palace, known as Manik Bagh, or Garden Werkstätten (ClassiCon taking over the license in
of Precious Stones, would go on to become one of the 1990), which Muthesius personally oversaw, helping
most important expressions of pre-war modern design. to adapt the design to serial production on the kind
Muthesius designed everything from the furniture of scale Perriand had dreamed about all those years
and lighting to the banisters and faucets, while also prior. There are several key diferences between the
incorporating furnishings by contemporaries such present pair, created for the palace in 1931, and the
as Eileen Gray and Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann. Serial later production. First, the seat of the original version
production pieces in tubular metal also fgured into attaches with screws that go directly through the top
the decorative scheme, including seating by Marcel ring of the frame’s base, as opposed to through four
Breuer and the chaise longue designed by Le Corbusier, tabs attached to the base, as seen in the ClassiCon
Charlotte Perriand, and Pierre Jeanneret. version. The dimensions of the frame are also slightly
diferent. While the diameter of the tube is the same,
Though the use of tubular metal furniture had its the original version is taller and wider.
roots in progressive art and architecture—Perriand,
for example, had hoped to make modern furniture The present pair has been reupholstered but retains
more accessible to the public through the use of the remnants of the original red vinyl upholstery, as well
material—these very much remained luxury items, as the original webbing and horsehair padding.
workshop-made and produced in small quantities.
Property from an Important Collection
Estimate
$15,000-20,000
Provenance
Phillips de Pury & Company, New York, “20-21st
Century Design Art,” May 24, 2005, lot 63
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
“A new contribution to the art of gracious
living,” Good Housekeeping, October 1931, p. 158
for an advertisement
158. Agnoldomenico Pica 1907-1990
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
“La casa di un architetto umanista,” Domus,
no. 75, March 1934, illustrated pp. 32-33
159. Jean-Michel Frank 1895-1941
Estimate
$20,000-30,000
Provenance
Marta Madero Unzué, Buenos Aires, circa 1940
Private collection, Mar del Plata, 2002
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Pierre-Emmanuel Martin-Vivier, Jean-Michel
Frank: The Strange and Subtle Luxury of the
Parisian Haute-Monde in the Art Deco Period,
New York, 2006, p. 316
160. Hammond Kroll 1898-1980
Estimate
$3,000-5,000
Provenance
Private collection, Forlì
Literature
Carlo A. Felice, Arte Decorativa 1930
all’Esposizione di Monza, Milan, 1930, pl. 122
“Nella galleria dell’illuminazione moderna,”
Domus, no. 31, July 1930, p. 51
Daybed
1930s
Ash-veneered wood, ash, fabric upholstery.
30 1/2 x 82 5/8 x 39 1/4 in. (77.5 x 209.9 x 99.7 cm)
Possibly executed by Mosé Turri, Bovisio
Mombello, Italy. Together with a certifcate of
expertise from the Paolo Bufa Archive.
Estimate
$6,000-8,000
Provenance
Private collection, Forlì
163. Carlo Scarpa 1906-1978
Monumental chandelier
circa 1927
Blown glass, painted steel, aluminum.
86 in. (218.4 cm) drop, 50 1/2 in. (128.3 cm) diameter
Produced by M.V.M. Cappellin & Co., Murano, Italy.
Estimate
$30,000-40,000
Provenance
Phillips, London, “Design,” September 27, 2011, lot 107
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Marino Barovier and Carlo Sonego, eds., The M.V.M.
Cappellin Glassworks and the Young Carlo Scarpa,
1925-1931, Milan, 2018, p. 464
164. Pietro Chiesa 1892-1948
Sideboard Provenance
1950s Private collection, Pavia
Brazilian rosewood-veneered wood, rosewood,
cherry wood-veneered wood, mirrored glass, brass. Literature
50 1/2 x 94 1/8 x 18 7/8 in. (128.3 x 239.1 x 47.9 cm) Roberto Aloi, Esempi di arredamento moderno
Together with a certifcate of expertise from the di tutto il mondo: Sale di soggiorno, camini,
Paolo Bufa Archive. Milan, 1954, fg. 196 for a similar example
Roberto Rizzi, I mobile di Paolo Bufa, exh.
Estimate cat., Mostra Internazionale dell’Arredamento,
$12,000-18,000 Cantù, 2002, pp. 33, 35, 37
166. Paolo Bufa 1903-1970
Floor lamp
circa 1940
Brass, painted wood, mirrored glass.
68 1/4 in. (173.4 cm) high
Possibly executed by Mario Quarti, Milan,
Italy. Together with a certifcate of expertise
from the Paolo Bufa Archive.
Estimate
$6,000-8,000
Provenance
Private collection, Varese
167. Seguso 168. Paolo Bufa 1903-1970
Literature
Roberto Rizzi, I mobili di Paolo Bufa, exh. cat.,
Mostra Internazionale dell’Arredamento, Cantù,
2002, p. 41 for a similar example
169. Paolo Bufa 1903-1970 170. In the Manner of Paolo Bufa
1903-1970
Pair of armchairs
circa 1950
Rare sofa
Cherry wood, fabric upholstery.
circa 1950
Each: 32 1/2 x 26 x 30 3/8 in. (82.6 x 66 x 77.2 cm)
Cherry wood, fabric upholstery.
Together with a certifcate of expertise from the
33 3/4 x 79 1/8 x 34 1/4 in. (85.7 x 201 x 87 cm)
Paolo Bufa Archive.
Estimate
Estimate
$7,000-9,000
$10,000-15,000
Provenance
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Private collection, Milan
Literature
“Alcuni Mobili di Paolo Bufa,” Domus, no. 178,
October 1942, p. 431 for a similar example
Roberto Aloi, L’arredamento moderno, quarta serie,
Milan, 1949, fg. 366 for a similar example
Paolo Bufa rarely made three-seater sofas as
they did not ft within his strictly held ideas about
furniture proportions. The present model was likely
made by the same artisans who worked with Bufa
on his pair of armchairs, as it refects the same
level of crafsmanship, use of materials, and style
as the armchairs. These cabinetmakers had their
own showrooms where they displayed their pieces
as well as works by Bufa, and it is well known that
these designers ofen modifed pieces on view to
their customers’ wishes. The original owners of the
present lot likely commissioned this piece to be
produced in the same manner as the armchairs in
order to have a complete set.
171. Pietro Chiesa 1892-1948
Floor lamp
circa 1937
Glass, painted metal, painted brass.
67 1/8 in. (170.5 cm) high
Manufactured by Fontana Arte, Milan, Italy.
Estimate
$6,000-8,000
Provenance
Private collection, Monaco
Literature
“Alcuni dei Vetri d’Arte Italiani Presentati a Parigi,”
Domus, no. 114, June 1937, p. 14
Laura Falconi, Fontana Arte: Una Storia
Trasparente, Milan, 1998, p. 206
Franco Deboni, Fontana Arte: Gio Ponti, Pietro
Chiesa, Max Ingrand, Turin, 2012, fg. 114
Sergio Montefusco, Fontana Arte: repertorio
1933-1943 dalle immagini dell’epoca, Genoa, 2012,
pp. 168, 229, 263
172. Fontana Arte
Mirror
1930s
Mirrored glass, glass, painted wood, brass.
43 1/4 x 27 1/21 x 1 1/2 in. (109.9 x 68.7 x 3.8 cm)
Manufactured by Fontana Arte, Milan, Italy. Reverse
with remnants of manufacturer’s paper label.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
173. Fontana Arte
Set of three ceiling lights
circa 1955
Acid-etched glass, brass.
Each: 13 1/2 in. (34.3 cm) drop, 23 in. (58.4 cm) diameter
Manufactured by Fontana Arte, Milan, Italy.
Estimate
$12,000-18,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
Franco Deboni, Fontana Arte: Gio Ponti, Pietro Chiesa,
Max Ingrand, Turin, 2012, fg. 29 for a similar example
Domus, no. 313, December 1955, n.p. for an advertisement
174. Venini
Folding mirror, model no. 21
circa 1939
Treccia glass, mirrored glass, brass.
14 7/8 x 43 1/2 x 14 1/2 in. (37.8 x 110.5 x 36.8 cm),
fully extended
Produced by Venini & C., Murano, Italy. Back
plate impressed VENINI/MURANO.
Estimate
$6,000-8,000
Provenance
Private collection, Buenos Aires
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Franco Deboni, Venini Glass: Its History, Artists and
Techniques, Catalogue 1921-2007, Volume 1, Turin,
2007, The Blue Catalogue (appendix), pl. 44A
175. Gio Ponti 1891-1979
Pair of armchairs
circa 1938
Walnut, fabric upholstery.
Each: 30 x 32 x 29 in. (76.2 x 81.3 x 73.7 cm)
Together with a certifcate of expertise from
the Gio Ponti Archives.
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Provenance
Private collection, Pavia
Literature
“Un Appartamento Risistemato a Milano,”
Domus, no. 131, November 1938, p. 15 for a
similar example
176. Seguso
Four wall lights
circa 1954
Glass, brass.
Largest: 47 1/4 x 28 7/8 x 10 1/4 in. (120 x 73.3 x 26 cm)
Produced by Seguso Vetri d’Arte, Murano, Italy.
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Provenance
Hotel Bristol, Merano
Property of a Private Collector
Console table
circa 1940
Gilt wrought iron, marble.
38 1/4 x 42 x 17 1/4 in. (97.2 x 106.7 x 43.8 cm)
Estimate
$12,000-18,000
Provenance
Barry Friedman Ltd., New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Pierre Kjellberg, Le Mobilier du XXe Siècle,
Dictionnaire des Créateurs, Paris, 1994, p. 494
François Baudot, Gilbert Poillerat: Maître Ferronnier,
Paris, 1998, pp. 76, 118 for similar examples
178. Gio Ponti 1891-1979
Sofa
circa 1930
Walnut-veneered wood, walnut, brass,
fabric upholstery.
22 7/8 x 90 1/8 x 34 in. (58.1 x 228.9 x 86.4 cm)
Together with a certifcate of expertise from
the Gio Ponti Archives.
Estimate
$15,000-20,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
179. Gio Ponti 1891-1979
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
180. Giovanni Gariboldi 1908-1971
Large vase
circa 1947
Glazed stoneware.
24 3/8 in. (61.9 cm) high
Manufactured by Richard Ginori, San Cristoforo,
Milan, Italy. Underside with manufacturer’s mark in
glaze and RICHARD GINORI/MADE IN ITALY/896.
Estimate
$5,000-7,000
Provenance
Private collection, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2002
Literature
Valerio Terraroli, Ceramica italiana d’autore,
1900-1950, Milan, 2007, p. 194
Giacinta Cavagna di Gualdana, Gariboldi,
Mantua, 2010, p. 62
Bar cabinet
1950s
Ash-veneered wood, brass inlay, walnut-veneered
wood, glass, mirrored glass, frosted glass.
56 1/8 x 63 1/4 x 17 1/4 in. (142.6 x 160.7 x 43.8 cm)
Manufactured by Arrighi Serafno, Cantù, Italy. Interior
of cabinet with manufacturer’s brass label marked
CAV. ARRIGHI SERAFINO/MOBILI D’ARTE/CANTU.
Estimate
$10,000-15,000
Provenance
Private collection, Milan
Literature
Roberto Aloi, Esempi di arredamento moderno di
tutto il mondo: Sale di soggiorno, camini, Milan, 1954,
fg. 194 for a similar example
Paolo Bufa designer 30 opere dal 1939 al 1968, Cantù,
1993, p. 28 for a similar example
Roberto Rizzi, I mobili di Paolo Bufa, exh. cat.,
Mostra Internazionale dell’Arredamento, Cantù, 2002,
pp. 45-46 for a similar example
Sale Information
Front cover Jean Royère, “Ours Polaire” sofa, 1950s, lot 10 © 2019 Estate
of Jean Royère/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris
Spread following index Jean Royère, Rare “Œuf” chest of drawers,
circa 1956, lot 4 (detail) © 2019 Estate of Jean Royère/Artists Rights
Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris
Back cover Paul Jeanneney, Gourd-form vase, circa 1900, lot 121 (detail)
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NEW YORK AUCTION
MARCH 2020
Enquiries
Sam Mansour
smansour@phillips.com
Visit us at phillips.com
Katharina Grosse
Untitled (detail)
acrylic on paper
39 5/8 x 26 in. (100.6 x 66 cm.)
Executed in 2012.
© 2019 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn
450 Park Avenue New York 10022
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Design
Auction 26 March 2020
London
Enquiries
antonia.king@phillips.com
Lucie Rie
Swan-necked vase, circa 1960
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Index
Enquiries
editionslondon@phillips.com
Keith Haring
Dog, 1986
Keith Haring artwork © Keith Haring Foundation
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4. Jean Royère
100. Herbert Bayer
60. Alessandro Mendini and Giorgio Gregori
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