RK Chaise by Ronald Krueck and Mark Sexton

RK Chaise by Ronald Krueck and Mark Sexton, ca. 1987

Mirror-polished stainless steel, brass, Spinneybeck Ducale velour leather. 36 1/2 x 69 3/8 x 25 5/8 in. (92.7 x 176.2 x 65.1 cm.) Manufactured by Tesko, USA.

ESTIMATE $30,000-40,000

PROVENANCE Residence, Untitled No. 2, Chicago

LITERATURE John Morris Dixon, “Elevated Urbanity,” Progressive Architecture, December 1987, pp. 74-75 and 77; Michael Walsh, “A Sensuous Space,” Inland Architect, May/June 1988, p. 46; Joseph Giovannini, “In Chicago, Design for Life in the Sky,” The New York Times, July 25, 1988, p. 19; “Untitled No. 2,” A+U, no. 284, May 1994, pp. 112 and 115; Ronald Krueck and Mark Sexton, Krueck & Sexton: Work in Progress, New York, 1997, pp. 82, 84 and 89.

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NANNA AND JØRGEN DITZEL, Pair of Ring armchairs


Pair of Ring armchairs, ca. 1958
Teak, fabric. Each: 25 1/4 in. (64.1 cm.) high Manufactured by Kold Saværk, Denmark and distributed by George Tanier, USA. Underside impressed with GEORGE TANIER SELECTION/Made in Denmark (2).
ESTIMATE $7,000-9,000

LITERATURE Noritsugu Oda, Danish Chairs, San Francisco, 1996, p. 167

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2 Small Oeuf (=Egg) Chairs by Jean Royère

2 Small Oeuf (=Egg) Chairs by Jean Royère

Jean Royère

Pair of small Oeuf (= Egg) chairs, 1951
Oak, fabric (2). Each: 24 1/2 in. (62.2 cm.) high
ESTIMATE $50,000-70,000

LITERATURE Catherine and Stephane de Beyrie and Jacques Ouaiss, Jean Royère, New York, 2000, illustrated p. 59

JEAN ROYÈRE
The ovum is the seat of human life and the largest cell in the body. Jean Royère flipped the egg and sat the body in it. He first exhibited his small ‘Oeuf’ chairs at the 1954 Salon des Arts Ménagers in Paris, although they had incubated since 1951. Two halves faced each other across his ‘Foyer d’aujourd’hui’. He placed a low ‘Puddle’ table between them like a spilt yolk. In Jean Royère (Galerie de Beyrie, 2000), Michael Boyd wrote: “There is a serious sculptural content imbued—but there is a playful, even humorous side, too.” Simply put, Royère cracked a good joke. ‘Polar Bears’, ‘Elephants’, ‘Bananas’—he enlivened his furniture with surrealist good humor. But Boyd is right, Royère modeled in the round. His ‘Sculpture Furniture’ (1955), overstuffed forms raised on turned oak legs, hatched from his ‘Oeufs’. Of all the Gallic roosters, Royère fluffed his feathers highest. His elaborate upholstery and exaggerated lines best reflected the buoyant mood of the postwar years. In the mid-1950s, attendance at the Salon des Arts Ménagers routinely surpassed a million. It’s hard to imagine Pierre Paulin, Verner Panton, and the rest of the flock weren’t aware of his cupped seats—especially Arne Jacobsen whose own ‘Egg’ chair (the present Lot 116) followed in 1958.

Update: Sold at $124,900

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Last edited by Guido J. van den Elshout on December 22, 2011 at 12:45 AM

Phillips de Pury & Company: GIO PONTI, Extremely rare table with four stools

Extremely rare table with four stools by Gio Ponti, 1968

Table: lacquered wood; each stool: lacquered wood, skaai. Table: 29 in. (73.7 cm.) high, 45 3/8 in. (115.3 cm.)diameter; each stool: 21 1/4 in. (54 cm.) high Manufactured by Mobilifici Tosi, Italy. One of two examples of this design which were never put into production. Together with a certificate of authenticity from the Ponti archives (5).
ESTIMATE $80,000-100,000

Via Phillips de Pury & Company: GIO PONTI, Extremely rare table with four stools

Phillips de Pury & Company: FRANCO ALBINI, Rare rocking chaise, model no. PS16

Rocking chaise, model no. PS16 by Franco Albini, 1956

Walnut, bent walnut, fabric, rope. 28 x 70 1/2 x 24 3/8 in. (71.1 x 179.1 x 61.9 cm.) Manufactured by Poggi, Italy. Together with original fabric cushion.
ESTIMATE $40,000-60,000
LITERATURE Giuliana Gramigna, Repertorio 1950/1980, Milan, 1985, p. 96

Via Phillips de Pury & Company: FRANCO ALBINI, Rare rocking chaise, model no. PS16