Important Design
Important Design
Wall unit, variant of the MT 407 model
Live auction begins on:
November 14, 01:30 PM GMT
Estimate
280,000 - 340,000 EUR
Lot Details
Description
Pierre Chareau
Wall unit, variant of the MT 407 model
Circa 1926
Patinated hammered iron, mahogany, sycamore, resin and metal key
Closed dimensions : 99,5 x 96 x 63 cm ; 39 ⅛ x 37 ¾ x 24 ¾.
Grand Hôtel de Tours
Private collection, Paris
Michel Souillac collection, Paris
Drouot Montaigne, Mes Poulain - Le Fur, Paris, 5 April 1993, lot 311
Galerie Doria, Paris
Private collection, Paris, 2002
Artcurial, Paris, 26 November 2019, lot 45
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Private collection, Paris
For our furniture :
1930 : quand le meuble devient sculpture, exhibition catalogue, Le Louvre des Antiquaires, Paris, 6 March- 6 June 1981, reproduced n°96
Pierre Chareau, Mobilier, exhibition catalogue, Galerie Doria, Paris, 18 October 2002 - 20 February 2003, reproduced pl. 4 and 5
Marc Bédarida and Francis Lamond, Pierre Chareau: I. biographie, expositions, mobilier, Paris, 2023, referenced under n°18 p. 342
For a variant of the model :
Kenneth Frampton et Marc Vellay, Pierre Chareau : architecte-meublier, 1883-1950, Paris, 1984, p. 85 and 210
Brian Brace Taylor, Pierre Chareau : designer and architect, Köln, 1992, p. 95
Pierre Chareau, architecte : un art d’intérieur, exhibition catalogue, Centre Georges Pompidou,Paris, 3 November 1993 - 17 January 1994 , p. 171-172
Pierre Chareau : modern architecture and design, exhibition catalogue, Jewish Museum, New York, 4 November 2016 - 26 March 2017, p. 46 and 143
Pierre Chareau’s furniture, like architecture, is based on the principles of modularity, movement and contrasting materials, as illustrated by our newspaper stand, a variant of the MT 407 model. Specially designed by Pierre Chareau for the Grand Hotel de Tours in 1927, our piece features a loadbearing structure in patinated hammered flat iron, on which mobile shelves articulate, complemented by a mahogany side box. This piece demonstrates Pierre Chareau’s taste for minimalist geometric compositions and airy lines, as well as his attention to furniture functionality.
Combining the elegance of cabinetmaking with the raw solidity of a hammered iron frame with exposed screws,
whose manufacture Chareau entrusted to ironworker Louis Dalbet, it is a signature piece of furniture, a perfect illustration of Pierre Chareau’s modernity in the artistic landscape of the 1920s.
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