IMPORTANT ART NOUVEAU LIGHTING AND FURNITURE FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION [catalogue]

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Design New York / 8 June 2023
Important Art Nouveau Lighting and Furniture from a Private Collection

A Bold New Brilliance: Electric Art Nouveau Lighting

On the occasion of offering an exceptional group of Art Nouveau from an important private collection, Luke T. Baker considers the advent of artistic lighting concurrent with electrification and the incandescent light bulb. Styling and photography in the showroom of Studio Giancarlo Valle reimagines the category in a contemporary setting.

On the cusp of the 20th century, designers in France, Belgium, Great Britain and beyond brought together two complementary and dynamic developments that would come to symbolize the progressive home: electric lighting and the emphatically forward-thinking Art Nouveau style. These six exquisite table lamps by French Art Nouveau masters Émile Gallé, Louis Majorelle, Maurice Boval, and the Daum glassworks assert a newfound sense of aesthetic freedom made possible by the advent of electricity. Each work embodies a highly unique reflection of the ways these artists, craftsmen, and glassworkers defined the new artistic forms that gave shape to this thoroughly modern mode of illumination.

No modern-era innovation has been as transformative on the domestic interior as the introduction of electric lighting. After tens of thousands of years of relying on smoky candles, finicky oil lamps, and dangerous gas jets to stave off the darkness, electric-powered light began to enter our homes (and workplaces, schools, and public places) beginning in the 1880s. While early examples of electric lighting emerged in the first decades of the 19th century, it wasn’t commercially viable until the introduction of the vacuum-sealed incandescent bulb, perfected almost simultaneously by British chemist Sir Joseph Swan (1878) and American inventor Thomas Alva Edison (1879). The electricpowered incandescent lamp marked a sea change from the prevailing paradigm of combustion lighting, delivering clean, safe, and reliable illumination at the touch of a button. For those early adopters who could afford such a novelty, it was a life-changing—if still mysterious—means of bringing brightness into the home without the maintenance, mess, and hazard of fuel-burning lamps.

Before this point, the design of domestic lighting was, in large part, governed by the practical requirements of the format. Open flames, fuel reservoirs, glass chimneys, drip collectors, and connection to gas lines dictated what lamps could look like, and often, where they could be located. Electric lamps, conversely, needed only a cord, bulb, and optional shade, enabling designers to divorce form from function and take lighting to new levels of artistry and abstraction. In the hands of designers like Gallé and Majorelle, lamps assumed Art Nouveau’s signature linework and organic motifs, becoming domestic sculptures resembling flowers and plants. Their intricate metalwork bases evoked vining tendrils or naturalistic stems, supporting art glass shades (a French specialty) that emphasized color and texture and revisited ancient glassworking techniques with new vitality. Lighter and more sculptural than the ornately decorated combustion lamps that preceded them, these stylized electric lamps could be easily moved from room to room to bring visual interest and focused lighting to tablescapes, fireplace mantels, and writing desks.

The gorgeous Nénuphar lamp, produced by Majorelle with the Nancy-based Daum Frères studio around 1903, exemplifies Art Nouveau’s rejection of historicist styles and intense interest in nature. This water lily-inspired lamp is perched on a patinated bronze stalk, as though emerging from a pond flanked by a trio of frogs. The flower-shaped glass shade exhibits the beautiful effect of colored glass, carefully layering the petals’ soft pink with the translucent green veining of a naturalistically rendered leaf. A tiny insect of jewel-like applied glass adorns the blossom on each side. Majorelle and Daum’s design introduced the novel artistic possibilities of Art Nouveau lighting to audiences at both regional and national exhibitions, and today, variant examples of this important work can be found in the collections of the Musée D’Orsay and the Museum of Modern Art.

The flower-inspired electric lamp was ideal for showcasing the marvel of the incandescent bulb, unlike many combustionfueled contemporaries that sought to conceal the burning gas jet or the mantle mechanism of an oil lamp. In Majorelle’s alluring Magnolia lamp from 1904, the bare, clean-burning bulb is nestled within the open petals of the namesake bloom, masterfully rendered in opalescent glass by Daum Frères and perched on a stylized bronze branch complete with buds. The distinctive Chardon lamp also shows off the aesthetic possibilities engendered by the small, smokeless bulb. An elongated and highly naturalistic bronze stalk created by Maurice Bouval cradles a glowing purple thistle head made from translucent etched glass (also by Daum Frères)—a precious glass globe within a precious glass globe. (The thistle, or chardon in French, is significant as a symbol of the Lorraine region, home to the Daum studio, and the École de Nancy, both prolific centers for Art Nouveau design.)

Two examples by Gallé, the colorful Lotus table lamp from c. 1900 and the spectacular mushroom-shaped Ombelle lamp from about 1903 both sit atop elegant decorative glass bases with bronze or wrought iron supports. With only a thin cord bringing steady power to the light source, Gallé’s graceful, stem-like natural forms are unencumbered by bulky fuel reservoirs, fill spouts for replenishing oil or kerosene, knobs for controlling the flame height, or complex clockwork and springloaded mechanisms for bringing the fuel to the wick.

A flower-inspired circa 1900 metal and glass table lamp, also by Gallé, compellingly captures one of the most significant design opportunities designers exploited with new flameless electric lighting. Whereas the light source in a combustible lamp always needs to be oriented upright with the direction of the flame, the electric bulb is uniquely able to function flawlessly and direct light at any angle, even when pointed straight down. The Gallé lamp features a sinuous, patinated bronze base perched on coiling tendrils and a realistically modeled leaf, but its most striking feature is the red shade of cased and etched glass, which hangs downward like a bell-shaped flower to cast its light upon a desk or table.

These six Art Nouveau table lamps are charged with a vivacious spirit that captures the energy and excitement of the electric age. The invisible, abstract concept of electricity and the unique properties of the incandescent bulb invited Art Nouveau designers to look to the natural realm for organic inspiration. Liberated from the functional mandates and historic precedent of the combustion flame, each lamp expresses a modern reimagining of the form, fit for illuminating our modern new world.

Property from an Important Private Collection

67. Émile Gallé 1846-1904

Lotus table lamp

circa 1900

Overlaid, acid-etched, internally streaked, and fire-polished glass, patinated bronze. 18 in. (45.7 cm) high Stem cameo signed Gallé

Estimate

$20,000-30,000

Provenance

Macklowe Gallery Ltd., New York Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2007

Literature

Janine Bloch-Derman, L’Art du Verre en France, 1860-1914, Lausanne, 1974, p. 91 for a similar example

Philippe Garner, Émile Gallé, New York, 1976, p. 149 for a similar example

Alastair Duncan and Georges de Bartha, Gallé Lamps, Suffolk, 2014, p. 19 for a similar example

Property from an Important Private Collection

68. Eugène Gaillard 1862-1933

Set of five nesting tables

circa 1913

Maple, burl walnut-veneered wood.

Central table: 28 5/8 x 27 5/8 x 27 5/8 in. (72.7 x 70.2 x 70.2 cm)

Each nesting table: 27 1/8 x 17 1/2 x 11 1/2 in.

(68.9 x 44.5 x 29.2 cm)

Estimate $10,000-15,000

Provenance

Impulsion B, Paris

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2001

Literature

M. P. Verneuil, “Le Salon de la Société des Artistes Décorateurs en 1913,” Art et Décoration, March 1913, p. 96

Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 18951914, Volume III: Furniture, Woodbridge, 1996, p. 217

Property from an Important Private Collection

69. Daum Frères and Louis Majorelle 1859-1926

“Nénuphar” table lamp

circa 1903

Wheel-carved, overlaid, acid-etched and applied glass, patinated bronze.

27 5/8 in. (70.2 cm) high

Shade engraved DAUM/NANCY and with the Cross of Lorraine.

Estimate

$120,000-180,000

Provenance

Private collection

Christie’s, New York, “Important 20th Century Decorative Art & Design,” June 5, 2007, lot 48

Acquired from the above by the present owner

Literature

Exposition de l’Alliance Provinciale des Industries d’Art. Ecole de Nancy: Catalogue Officiel Illustré, 1903, Paris, n.p. Alastair Duncan, Louis Majorelle: Master of Art Nouveau Design, New York, 1991, pp. 139, 149, 215

Victor Arwas, Art Nouveau: The French Aesthetic, London, 2002, p. 292

Christophe Bardin, Daum 1878-1939: Une Industrie d’Art Lorraine, Metz, 2004, p. 303

Masterpieces of Art Nouveau Furniture: The Majorelle Catalogue ca. 1910, New York, 2002, pl. 92

Julius Hoffmann Jr., The Modern Style, 1899-1905: Art Nouveau, 2006, Bonn, pp. 197, 273

Roselyne Bouvier, Majorelle: Un Art de Vivre Moderne, Nancy, 2009, p. 143 for a similar example

The present lamp is the only known “Nénuphar” example to feature the application of mold-blown scarabs on the shade.

Property from an Important Private Collection

70. Georges de Feure 1864-1943

Pair of side chairs

circa 1900

Ash, fabric upholstery.

Each: 34 1/4 x 14 5/8 x 15 7/8 in. (87 x 37.1 x 40.3 cm)

Estimate

$3,000-5,000

Provenance

Raymond Toupenet, Paris

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2001

Literature

G.M. Jacques, “L’Intérieur Rénové,” L’Art Décoratif, September 1900, pp. 222, 224

Philippe Jullian, The Triumph of Art Nouveau: Paris Exhibition 1900, New York, 1974, p. 119

Gabriel P. Weisberg, Art Nouveau Bing: Paris Style 1900, New York, 1986, pp. 188, 190

Ian Millman, Georges de Feure: Maître du Symbolisme et de l’Art Nouveau, Paris, 1992, p. 154

Ian Millman, Georges de Feure, 1986-1943, Amsterdam, 1993, pp. 21, 84 Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 1895-1914, Volume III: Furniture, Woodbridge, 1996, pp. 126-27

The present model chairs were presented at the L’Art Nouveau pavilion at the Exposition Universelle of 1900, Paris.

Property from an Important Private Collection

71. Daum Frères and Louis Majorelle 1859-1926

“Magnolia” table lamp

circa 1904

Opalescent blown glass, patinated bronze. 23 5/8 x 8 1/2 x 6 1/2 in. (60 x 21.6 x 16.5 cm)

Shade engraved DAUM/NANCY and with Cross of Lorraine, base incised L Majorelle/Nancy

Estimate

$30,000-50,000

Provenance

Macklowe Gallery Ltd., New York

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2004

Literature

Janine Bloch-Derman, L’Art du Verre en France, 1860-1914, Lausanne, 1974, p. 138 for a similar example

Noël Daum, Daum: Mastery of Glass, Lausanne, 1980, p. 147

Alastair Duncan, Louis Majorelle: Master of Art Nouveau Design, New York, 1991, pp. 146, 215

Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 18951914, Volume V: Objets d’Art & Metalware, Woodbridge, 1999, p. 396 Masterpieces of Art Nouveau Furniture: The Majorelle Catalogue ca. 1910, New York, 2002, pl. 32

Julius Hoffmann Jr., The Modern Style, 18991905: Art Nouveau, 2006, Bonn, p. 221 Roselyne Bouvier, Majorelle: Un Art de Vivre Modern, Paris, 2009, p. 99

Property from an Important Private Collection

72. Louis Majorelle 1859-1926

Pair of rare sellettes

circa 1900

Fruitwood, fruitwood-veneered wood. Each: 45 1/4 x 13 1/2 x 13 in. (114.9 x 34.3 x 33 cm)

Estimate $6,000-8,000

Provenance

Raymond Toupenet, Paris

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2002

Literature

Alastair Duncan, Louis Majorelle: Master of Art Nouveau Design, New York, 1991, p. 31 for the occasional table version

Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 18951914, Volume III: Furniture, Woodbridge, 1996, p. 391 for the occasional table version

Property from an Important Private Collection

73. Établissements Gallé

Flowering maple table lamp

circa 1920

Cameo acid-etched glass. 19 in. (48.3 cm) high

Base cameo signed Gallé.

Estimate $6,000-8,000

Provenance

Georges Fasa, Paris

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2000

Literature

Alastair Duncan and Georges de Bartha, Gallé Lamps, Suffolk, 2014, pp. 94-95, 97-99 for similar examples

Property from an Important Private Collection

74. Émile Gallé 1846-1904

“Libellules” guéridon

circa 1900

Walnut, oak, burl oak, pearwood, and mahogany marquetry-veneered wood

30 1/8 x 24 x 24 1/2 in. (76.5 x 61 x 62.2 cm)

Top signed Gallé in the marquetry.

Estimate

$30,000-50,000

Provenance

Macklowe Gallery, New York

Roberta and Bruce Brauston, Ohio, acquired from the above, 1981 Macklowe Gallery Ltd., New York, acquired from the above

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2006

Literature

Bernd Hakenjos and Sigrid Barten, Émile Gallé: Keramik, Glas und Möbel des Art Nouveau, Zürich, 1980, p. 98

Tim Newark, The Art of Émile Gallé, London, 1989, p. 28

Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 18951914, Volume III: Furniture, Woodbridge, 1996, p. 225

Property from an Important Private Collection

75. Émile Gallé 1846-1904

Table lamp

circa 1900

Cased and acid-etched glass, patinated bronze.

20 1/4 x 12 3/8 x 10 1/2 in. (51.4 x 31.4 x 26.7 cm)

Shade engraved Gallé.

Estimate

$6,000-8,000

Provenance

Macklowe Gallery Ltd., New York Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2006

Literature

Alastair Duncan and Georges de Bartha, Gallé Lamps, Suffolk, 2014, pp. 35, 65 for similar examples

Property from an Important Private Collection

76. Louis Majorelle 1859-1926

Guéridon

circa 1902

Fruitwood, fruitwood-veneered wood. 30 1/4 x 25 1/2 x 25 1/2 in. (76.8 x 64.8 x 64.8 cm)

Estimate $3,000-5,000

Provenance

Raymond Toupenet, Paris

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2002

Literature

Alastair Duncan, Louis Majorelle: Master of Art Nouveau Design, New York, 1991, p. 31

Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 18951914, Volume III: Furniture, Woodbridge, 1996, p. 391

Property from an Important Private Collection

77. Émile Gallé 1846-1904

“Ombelle” table lamp

circa 1903

Overlaid, acid-etched and wheel-polished glass, patinated wrought iron.

31 in. (78.7 cm) high Shade cameo signed Gallé

Estimate

$25,000-35,000

Provenance

Raymond Toupenet, Paris

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2002

Literature

Armand Guérinet, ed., Exposition Lorraine: L’École de Nancy au Musée de l’Union Centrale des Arts Décoratifs, Paris, 1903, pl. 4 for a similar example

Philippe Garner, Émile Gallé, London, 1976, p. 48 for a similar example

Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 1895-1914, Volume IV: Ceramics & Glass, Woodbridge, 1998, p. 222 for a similar example

Victor Arwas, Art Nouveau: The French Aesthetic, London, 2002, p. 285 for a similar example

Alastair Duncan and Georges de Bartha, Gallé Lamps, Suffolk, 2014, pp. 28-29, 70-71 for similar examples

Property from an Important Private Collection

78. Louis Majorelle 1859-1926

“La Cascade” cabinet

circa 1899

East Indian rosewood, Macassar ebony, walnut, olive wood, mahogany, oak, lacewood, and mother of pearl marquetryveneered wood, fabric.

66 x 31 1/2 x 15 3/4 in. (167.6 x 80 x 40 cm)

Estimate $60,000-80,000

Provenance

Macklowe Gallery Ltd., New York

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2004

Literature

“Salon de 1899,” L’Art Décoratif, June 1899, p. 119

René Dulong, “La Sculpture Décorative aux Salons,” Art et Décoration, August 1899, p. 44

Roberta Waddell, ed., The Art Nouveau Style, New York, 1977, p. 200

Alastair Duncan, Louis Majorelle: Master of Art Nouveau Design, New York, 1991, p. 31

Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 18951914, Volume III: Furniture, Woodbridge, 1996, p. 395

Julius Hoffmann Jr., The Modern Style, 1899-1905: Art Nouveau, 2006, Bonn, p. 40

Property from an Important Private Collection

79. Georges de Feure 1864-1943

Chaise longue

circa 1900

Ash, fabric upholstery.

30 3/4 x 28 1/2 x 76 1/4 in. (78.1 x 72.4 x 193.7 cm)

Estimate

$4,000-6,000

Provenance

Raymond Toupenet, Paris

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2001

Literature

G.M. Jacques, “L’Intérieur Rénové,” L’Art Décoratif, September 1900, p. 222

Gustave Soulier, “Les Sièges,” Art et Décoration,” November 1901, p. 20

Philippe Jullian, The Triumph of Art

Nouveau: Paris Exhibition 1900, New York, 1974, p. 119

Roberta Waddell, ed., The Art Nouveau Style, New York, 1977, p. 231

Gabriel P. Weisberg, Art Nouveau Bing: Paris Style 1900, New York, 1986, p. 188

Ian Millman, Georges de Feure: Maître du Symbolisme et de l’Art Nouveau, Paris, 1992, p. 154

Ian Millman, Georges de Feure, 1986-1943, Amsterdam, 1993, p. 21

Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 18951914, Volume III: Furniture, Woodbridge, 1996, p. 126

The present model chaise longue was presented at the L’Art Nouveau pavilion at the Exposition Universelle of 1900, Paris.

Property from an Important Private Collection

80. Daum Frères and Maurice Bouval and 1863-1916

“Chardon” table lamp

circa 1903

Acid-etched glass, patinated bronze. 20 3/4 in. (52.7 cm) high

Base incised M. BOUVAL

Estimate

$12,000-18,000

Provenance

Macklowe Gallery, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2006

Literature

Armand Guérinet, ed., L’Art Décoratif aux Expositions des Beaux-Arts, Paris, 1903, pl. 197

Alastair Duncan, Art Nouveau and Art Deco Lighting, London, 1978, p. 133

Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 18951914, Volume V: Objets d’Art & Metalware, Woodbridge, 1999, p. 127

Property from an Important Private Collection

81. Georges de Feure 1864-1943

Armchair

circa 1900

Ash, fabric upholstery.

32 1/2 x 24 x 21 1/3 in. (82.6 x 61 x 54.2 cm)

Estimate

$2,000-3,000

Provenance

Raymond Toupenet, Paris

Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2001

Literature

G.M. Jacques, “L’Intérieur Rénové,” L’Art Décoratif, September 1900, p. 223

Gustave Soulier, “Les Sièges,” Art et Décoration,” November 1901, p. 20

Alastair Duncan, The Paris Salon 18951914, Volume III: Furniture, Woodbridge, 1996, p. 125

Gabriel P. Weisberg, Art Nouveau Bing: Paris Style 1900, New York, 1896, p. 189

The present model armchair was presented at the L’Art Nouveau pavilion at the Exposition Universelle of 1900, Paris.

Design

New York / 8 June 2023

Auction & Viewing Location 432 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10022

Auction

Thursday, 8 June at 2pm

Viewing

2–8 June 2023

Monday–Saturday 10am–6pm Sunday 12pm–6pm

Sale Designation

When sending in written bids or making enquiries please refer to this sale as NY050223 or Design.

Absentee and Telephone Bids

Tel +1 212 940 1228 Fax +1 212 940 1749 bidsnewyork@phillips.com

Design Department

Head of Department, New York Cordelia Lembo clembo@phillips.com

Head of Design, West Coast, Senior International Specialist Meaghan Roddy mroddy@phillips.com

Head of Design, France, Senior International Specialist Elie Massaoutis emassaoutis@phillips.com

Senior International Specialist Beth Vilinsky bvilinsky@phillips.com

Specialist Kimberly Sørensen ksorensen@phillips.com

Associate Specialist, Associate Head of Sale Benjamin Green bgreen@phillips.com

Administrator Cecilia Moure cmoure@phillips.com

In situ photography by Clément Pascal. Studio photography by Kent Pell.

Please refer to Phillips’ website www.phillips.com for the Conditions of Sale applicable to the auction.

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