Andre Arbus TWELVE dining chairs (#1751)

$60,000.00

French Art Deco set of TWELVE dining chairs, circa 1938, by Andre Arbus in mahogany. 20” wide x 22” deep x 38” high. Could be used with Arbus mahogany dining table #1514 (https://www.calderwoodgallery.com/inventory/p/andre-arbus-dining-table-1514?rq=Arbus) This model is documented and the design is characteristic of Arbus’s late 1930s style, well-manifested in his participation in the The Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne held from 25 May to 25 November 1937 in Paris, France.

Andre Arbus

(1903-1969)

French Art Deco Architect and Designer, ANDRE ARBUS, WAS born in Toulouse, France. A third-generation cabinetmaker, Arbus became active in the Salons of the Societe des Artistes Decorateurs and the Salon d’Automne in Paris in 1925 at the young age of 22. His work included commissions for the 1922 oceanliner Bretagne, the 1927 La Provence and Ile-de-France as well as the 1961 France. He often used rare and exotic materials in his refined designs. These were elegant and pure and often gave the appearance of fragility – as in his neo-classical presentation at the Paris International Exposition of 1937. He compared the joints in his furniture to the joints of the human hand. His commissions also included private townhouses as well as Le Mobilier National for which designed a desk for U.S. Ambassador W. H. Harriman, and the post World War II Medici Room of the Chateau de Rambouillet.

 

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French Art Deco set of TWELVE dining chairs, circa 1938, by Andre Arbus in mahogany. 20” wide x 22” deep x 38” high. Could be used with Arbus mahogany dining table #1514 (https://www.calderwoodgallery.com/inventory/p/andre-arbus-dining-table-1514?rq=Arbus) This model is documented and the design is characteristic of Arbus’s late 1930s style, well-manifested in his participation in the The Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne held from 25 May to 25 November 1937 in Paris, France.

Andre Arbus

(1903-1969)

French Art Deco Architect and Designer, ANDRE ARBUS, WAS born in Toulouse, France. A third-generation cabinetmaker, Arbus became active in the Salons of the Societe des Artistes Decorateurs and the Salon d’Automne in Paris in 1925 at the young age of 22. His work included commissions for the 1922 oceanliner Bretagne, the 1927 La Provence and Ile-de-France as well as the 1961 France. He often used rare and exotic materials in his refined designs. These were elegant and pure and often gave the appearance of fragility – as in his neo-classical presentation at the Paris International Exposition of 1937. He compared the joints in his furniture to the joints of the human hand. His commissions also included private townhouses as well as Le Mobilier National for which designed a desk for U.S. Ambassador W. H. Harriman, and the post World War II Medici Room of the Chateau de Rambouillet.

 

French Art Deco set of TWELVE dining chairs, circa 1938, by Andre Arbus in mahogany. 20” wide x 22” deep x 38” high. Could be used with Arbus mahogany dining table #1514 (https://www.calderwoodgallery.com/inventory/p/andre-arbus-dining-table-1514?rq=Arbus) This model is documented and the design is characteristic of Arbus’s late 1930s style, well-manifested in his participation in the The Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne held from 25 May to 25 November 1937 in Paris, France.

Andre Arbus

(1903-1969)

French Art Deco Architect and Designer, ANDRE ARBUS, WAS born in Toulouse, France. A third-generation cabinetmaker, Arbus became active in the Salons of the Societe des Artistes Decorateurs and the Salon d’Automne in Paris in 1925 at the young age of 22. His work included commissions for the 1922 oceanliner Bretagne, the 1927 La Provence and Ile-de-France as well as the 1961 France. He often used rare and exotic materials in his refined designs. These were elegant and pure and often gave the appearance of fragility – as in his neo-classical presentation at the Paris International Exposition of 1937. He compared the joints in his furniture to the joints of the human hand. His commissions also included private townhouses as well as Le Mobilier National for which designed a desk for U.S. Ambassador W. H. Harriman, and the post World War II Medici Room of the Chateau de Rambouillet.