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Charlotte Perriand

(France, 1903-1999)
Estimate
1 000 000 - 1 500 000 SEK
93 400 - 140 000 EUR
103 000 - 155 000 USD
Purchasing info
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For condition report contact specialist
Karl Green
Stockholm
Karl Green
Specialist Modern and Contemporary Decorative Art & Design
+46 (0)700 07 94 25
Charlotte Perriand
(France, 1903-1999)

a "Forme Libre" table, executed by André Chetaille for Galerie Steph Simon, France, ca 1956.

Mahogany. Length 236 cm, width 108 cm, height 73 cm.

Minor wear and damages.

Provenance

Galerie Patrick Seguin, Paris.
Private Collection, New York.
Wright, Chicago, Design Masterworks, November 19, 2015, lot 9.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.

Literature

Jacques Barsac, "Charlotte Perriand: Complete Works 1955-1968, Volume III", Norma Editions 2017, pp. 86-87, 294, 300.
Justin McGuirk, "Charlotte Perriand: The Modern Life", Design Museum 2021, model illustrated p. 186.

More information

The innovative French architect and designer Charlotte Perriand spoke of “l’art d’habiter,” or the "art of living.” She saw her designs not simply as objects but as part of a larger social program to extend the pleasures of modern life. Her long career encompassed much of the history of modern design in France, and over the years Perriand collaborated with Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret, and Jean Prouvé. Through her own practice, she led projects in Europe, Asia, and South America.

In March 1956, Galerie Steph Simon opened on Boulevard Saint-Germain in Paris. Perriand was the gallery's artistic director and leading exhibitor alongside Jean Prouvé. The gallery issued several of Perriand's furniture models designed during the 1930s and onwards, mainly executed in the workshop of master cabinetmaker André Chetaille. The series of organically shaped furniture grew, and the present table is arguably one of Perriand's most iconic forms. Not only for its beauty but because in many ways it sums up her humanist design, with an emphasis on human tactile values. The table is made of solid mahogany, where the curvature of the top is shaped so that all those sitting can face each other, and the thickness and profile of the top correspond to the shape and size of a human hand. The form is thus not random, but carefully considered by Perriand to practice the “art of living”.

Read more about Charlotte Perriand and the "Forme Libre" table