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Auction archive: Lot number 17

Carlo Mollino

Estimate
US$250,000 - US$300,000
Price realised:
US$506,500
Auction archive: Lot number 17

Carlo Mollino

Estimate
US$250,000 - US$300,000
Price realised:
US$506,500
Beschreibung:

Carlo Mollino Unique adjustable daybed, designed for Casa Orengo, Turin 1949 Maple-veneered plywood, maple, stained maple, painted maple veneered wood, brass, fabric. 20 1/2 x 78 1/2 x 29 3/4 in. (52.1 x 199.4 x 75.6 cm) flat Produced by Apelli & Varesio, Italy.
Provenance Marquis Vladi Orengo, Casa Orengo, Turin, 1949 Count Vergnano di Villar, Turin Franco Semenzato & Co., Venice, "Mobili, arredi, oggetti vari," April 21, 1985, lot 67 Galerie Denys Bosselet, Paris Marc-André Hubin, Avenue Foch, Paris, 1986 Mara Cremniter, Paris Barry Friedman Ltd., New York, 1994 Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1997 Exhibited "Design Italian Style: Furniture by Carlo Mollino and Carlo Graffi," Barry Friedman Ltd., New York, May 1 - July 11, 1997 "Carlo Mollino: Arabesques," Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Turin, September 20, 2006-January 7, 2007 Literature ILLUSTRATED "Casa verso la collina," Domus, no. 265, December 1951, pp. 17, 19 "Scoperte & Riscoperte," Domus, no. 650, May 1984, pp. 36-37 Giovanni Brino, Carlo Mollino Architettura come Autobiografia, Milan, 1985, p. 124 Germano Celant, "Un appartamento a Parigi," Domus, no. 681, March 1987, p. 55 Rossella Colombari, Carlo Mollino Catalogo Del Mobili – Furniture Catalogue, Milan, 2005, pp. 66-67 Fulvio Ferrari and Napoleone Ferrari, The Furniture of Carlo Mollino New York, 2006, pp. 184, 225 Fulvio Ferrari and Napoleone Ferrari, eds., Carlo Mollino Arabesques, exh. cat., Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Milan, 2007, p. 83 Catalogue Essay The present lot is registered in the library of the Museo Casa Mollino, Turin, as number CM364-1. Phillips would like to thank Fulvio Ferrari and Napoleone Ferrari, Museo Casa Mollino, Turin, and Rossella Colombari, Galleria Colombari, Milan, and Barry Friedman, New York, for their assistance cataloguing the present lot. The interior of the Marquis Orengo residence, also known as Casa Orengo, was completed in 1950. Carlo Mollino conceived a large series of furniture for the river-facing apartment. The daybed was one of the main interior elements within the spacious living room, together with a large desk, table, chair, armchair, ceiling lights, large bookcase and sideboard. A similar later example of the daybed was produced for the seminal 1950 exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, “Italy at Work.” Read More Artist Bio Carlo Mollino Italian • 1905 - 1973 Carlo Mollino made sexy furniture. His style may have grown out of the whiplash curves of Art Nouveau, but the sinuous lines of his furniture were more humanoid than vegetal, evoking arched backs and other body parts. Mollino was also an avid aviator, skier and racecar driver — he designed his own car for Le Mans. His love of speed and danger comes across in his designs, which MoMA curator Paola Antonelli has described as having "frisson." Mollino had no interest in industrial design and the attendant constraints of material costs and packaging. His independent wealth allowed him to pick and choose projects, resulting in an oeuvre of unique, often site-specific works that were mostly executed by the Turin joinery firm Apelli & Varesio. Apart from a coffee table that he designed in 1950 for the American company Singer & Sons, his furniture never went into production. Notwithstanding the support of Gio Ponti Mollino's design contemporaries largely dismissed him as an eccentric outsider. However, the combination of scarcity (Mollino only made several hundred works in his lifetime), exquisite craftsmanship and idiosyncratic "frisson" has rightly placed Carlo Mollino in the highest tier of twentieth-century design collecting. View More Works

Auction archive: Lot number 17
Auction:
Datum:
16 Dec 2014
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

Carlo Mollino Unique adjustable daybed, designed for Casa Orengo, Turin 1949 Maple-veneered plywood, maple, stained maple, painted maple veneered wood, brass, fabric. 20 1/2 x 78 1/2 x 29 3/4 in. (52.1 x 199.4 x 75.6 cm) flat Produced by Apelli & Varesio, Italy.
Provenance Marquis Vladi Orengo, Casa Orengo, Turin, 1949 Count Vergnano di Villar, Turin Franco Semenzato & Co., Venice, "Mobili, arredi, oggetti vari," April 21, 1985, lot 67 Galerie Denys Bosselet, Paris Marc-André Hubin, Avenue Foch, Paris, 1986 Mara Cremniter, Paris Barry Friedman Ltd., New York, 1994 Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1997 Exhibited "Design Italian Style: Furniture by Carlo Mollino and Carlo Graffi," Barry Friedman Ltd., New York, May 1 - July 11, 1997 "Carlo Mollino: Arabesques," Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Turin, September 20, 2006-January 7, 2007 Literature ILLUSTRATED "Casa verso la collina," Domus, no. 265, December 1951, pp. 17, 19 "Scoperte & Riscoperte," Domus, no. 650, May 1984, pp. 36-37 Giovanni Brino, Carlo Mollino Architettura come Autobiografia, Milan, 1985, p. 124 Germano Celant, "Un appartamento a Parigi," Domus, no. 681, March 1987, p. 55 Rossella Colombari, Carlo Mollino Catalogo Del Mobili – Furniture Catalogue, Milan, 2005, pp. 66-67 Fulvio Ferrari and Napoleone Ferrari, The Furniture of Carlo Mollino New York, 2006, pp. 184, 225 Fulvio Ferrari and Napoleone Ferrari, eds., Carlo Mollino Arabesques, exh. cat., Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Milan, 2007, p. 83 Catalogue Essay The present lot is registered in the library of the Museo Casa Mollino, Turin, as number CM364-1. Phillips would like to thank Fulvio Ferrari and Napoleone Ferrari, Museo Casa Mollino, Turin, and Rossella Colombari, Galleria Colombari, Milan, and Barry Friedman, New York, for their assistance cataloguing the present lot. The interior of the Marquis Orengo residence, also known as Casa Orengo, was completed in 1950. Carlo Mollino conceived a large series of furniture for the river-facing apartment. The daybed was one of the main interior elements within the spacious living room, together with a large desk, table, chair, armchair, ceiling lights, large bookcase and sideboard. A similar later example of the daybed was produced for the seminal 1950 exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, “Italy at Work.” Read More Artist Bio Carlo Mollino Italian • 1905 - 1973 Carlo Mollino made sexy furniture. His style may have grown out of the whiplash curves of Art Nouveau, but the sinuous lines of his furniture were more humanoid than vegetal, evoking arched backs and other body parts. Mollino was also an avid aviator, skier and racecar driver — he designed his own car for Le Mans. His love of speed and danger comes across in his designs, which MoMA curator Paola Antonelli has described as having "frisson." Mollino had no interest in industrial design and the attendant constraints of material costs and packaging. His independent wealth allowed him to pick and choose projects, resulting in an oeuvre of unique, often site-specific works that were mostly executed by the Turin joinery firm Apelli & Varesio. Apart from a coffee table that he designed in 1950 for the American company Singer & Sons, his furniture never went into production. Notwithstanding the support of Gio Ponti Mollino's design contemporaries largely dismissed him as an eccentric outsider. However, the combination of scarcity (Mollino only made several hundred works in his lifetime), exquisite craftsmanship and idiosyncratic "frisson" has rightly placed Carlo Mollino in the highest tier of twentieth-century design collecting. View More Works

Auction archive: Lot number 17
Auction:
Datum:
16 Dec 2014
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
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