Etienne Martin side table (#1883)
French Modernist Art Deco side table by Etienne Martin, circa 1935, in rosewood and ebonized wood. This table is 27.5” in diameter x 24.5” high. To the top of the box it is 27” high. Restored and refinished.
French decorator and furniture designer Etienne Martin studied at the Ecole Boulle in Paris. He later worked for renowned designer/ironworker, Edgar Brandt, for three years. From 1938-1945 Martin was artistic director of Le Magasins du Louvre in Paris. Subsequently he was artistic director of Bon Marche in Brussels. A Modernist, Martin was influenced by the work of Louis Sognot and Rene Guillere. By 1954 he had set up his own workshop in Vanves, near Paris; he designed furniture, some of which was produced by JER, Borgeaud and Soubrier.
French Modernist Art Deco side table by Etienne Martin, circa 1935, in rosewood and ebonized wood. This table is 27.5” in diameter x 24.5” high. To the top of the box it is 27” high. Restored and refinished.
French decorator and furniture designer Etienne Martin studied at the Ecole Boulle in Paris. He later worked for renowned designer/ironworker, Edgar Brandt, for three years. From 1938-1945 Martin was artistic director of Le Magasins du Louvre in Paris. Subsequently he was artistic director of Bon Marche in Brussels. A Modernist, Martin was influenced by the work of Louis Sognot and Rene Guillere. By 1954 he had set up his own workshop in Vanves, near Paris; he designed furniture, some of which was produced by JER, Borgeaud and Soubrier.
French Modernist Art Deco side table by Etienne Martin, circa 1935, in rosewood and ebonized wood. This table is 27.5” in diameter x 24.5” high. To the top of the box it is 27” high. Restored and refinished.
French decorator and furniture designer Etienne Martin studied at the Ecole Boulle in Paris. He later worked for renowned designer/ironworker, Edgar Brandt, for three years. From 1938-1945 Martin was artistic director of Le Magasins du Louvre in Paris. Subsequently he was artistic director of Bon Marche in Brussels. A Modernist, Martin was influenced by the work of Louis Sognot and Rene Guillere. By 1954 he had set up his own workshop in Vanves, near Paris; he designed furniture, some of which was produced by JER, Borgeaud and Soubrier.