INDUSTRIALChicFinal PDF
INDUSTRIALChicFinal PDF
INDUSTRIALChicFinal PDF
Tolix model A Chair / Xavier Pauchard / 1925 .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 furniture for workers accommodation / Jean Pauchard / 1971 .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231
Rono Table / Rono / c. 1927.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 SHOPS, makers, MARKETS AND GALLERIES .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
Galaxie floodlight / Socit franaise dclairage GAL / 1928 .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125 FURTHER READING . ..................................................................................................................................................... 239
because I liked it, but it didnt sell!But Mouiren upcycling usa a global melting pot Europe, the cultures that remind us of the
is a specialist, and had been working with sheet industrial past, that deal with heavy metals and
metal for years in his native Provence. A car construction.
mechanic who married a dealers daughter and New York, 1995. In a store in the heart of Industrial design, like everything else in But be careful, warns Daniel Rozenstroch,
took over the store, he used to believe that the Tribeca, office furniture and wooden and metal life, now criss-crosses the world. As a French copies from China and India are now becoming
antiques trade primarily involved traditional seats, tables and bank counters filled the shop brand name is becoming a must-have item among more widespread, making this style of furniture
furniture, trinkets and ceramics. Was he bored? window. The industrial revolution had conquered US shoppers, American dealers can be found more commonplace. The creative director of
Of course he was. Butone day in 2000, I came Europe and was now making its way in the United scouring the second-hand markets of France, lifestyle magazine Marie-Claire Maison, himself a
face to face with a metal shelving unit, right in States. Just as they were once pioneers of the looking for undiscovered classics. Between 2000 great collector of industrial furniture, is firm in his
the middle of all the Louis-Philippe and Henri II industrial drive for progress, New Yorkers were and 2004, the clichs of French interior style in belief that cheap mass-produced imports could
furniture, and I bought it. now rediscovering a style of furniture that had the United States painted furniture, red-checked eventually diminish the status of industrial style.
Not far away in the village of Isle-sur-la- been left out in the cold by the citys first loft- tablecloths, charming basketwork were almost Will industrial furniture become a victim of its
Sorgue, Laurent Ardonceau also succumbed to dwellers, who had chosen to ignore it in the 1970s erased by the dominance of French industrial own success? Not while the story of these objects
the same passion. Soon, not even the smallest and instead preferred to fill their high-ceilinged, design. Industrial furniture was exported by the unearthed from our collective unconscious is still
scrap of metal could escape his quest for industrial metal-beamed homes with bric-a-brac, folk art or truckload: tables, shelving units and workbenches being told.
bargains. Its a feeling as well as a kind of poetry, furniture from the 1950s. in huge numbers, along with the best products of
he says of the youthful intuition that has now Not far away, the same trend was on full view French ironworks of the late 19th and early 20th Brigitte Durieux
made this Beaux-Arts graduate into a star of the at the showrooms of Urban Archaeology. The centuries, with anything recalling classic design
industrial design landscape. A few years ago he best of the new salvage trend was on show there, shapes and the spirit of Gustave Eiffel being
was picking up Jield lamps and Tolix chairs for including original Holophane lights, drawing particularly successful.
peanuts: I couldnt sell them, so I stockpiled tables, old bathroom taps and spiral staircases. This new economy very quickly set its
them. I sold the first heavy industrial objects, work This work inspired me a lot, Jrme Lepert own standards. Whereas Europeans admired
tables and strong boxes, to Bernard; he was the remembers today; in fact, he was so captivated by the original patinas of blue, green, red and
only person mad enough to take all this strange the concept that his business card now describes orange, Francine Gardner began designing
scrap metal off our hands. He was the only one him as an industrial archaeologist. industrial-style interiors for the American brand
who got it. The industrial history of North America Intrieurs in 1994 and favoured traditional,
Meanwhile, Jrme Lepert was rummaging had produced huge quantities of objects, and as unadorned metal for her heavy cabinets, cast-iron
around on the Grsillons industrial estate in in Europe, there was a sense of nostalgia in the tables and tool benches.
Gennevilliers. Overalls donned over a suit and tie, design community for this form of design and its
this former company president is now the chief of approach to materials, a feeling that quickly spread
industrial style, finding a rich harvest of objects in to the general public. the risk of overkill
former ironworks and paint factories in the Paris The changing status of the Tolix Model A
suburbs. He has never stopped rummaging in this chair among dealers over the last couple of decades
way. It has even become his trademark striding is an example. Between 1988 and 1989, recalls The trend we are now witnessing is a love of
up and down a factory floor in search of a lamp or international buyer Annick Ricochon, when industrial design in its purest and simplest form.
tracking down an original Nicolle stool, an item Paul Hawken was the first to include galvanized Singer sewing machines cover the walls of the
that he now manufactures himself. steel Tolix chairs in his mail-order catalogue, stores of the All Saints chain, ships strongboxes
These people are the pioneers of industrial he was probably thinking about the authenticity are found at Lclaireur in Paris, and foundry
chic in France, setting a style and inspiring and unusual nature of these pieces, but he could furniture is embraced by the Dutch designer Piet
others with the passion to follow it too. They sell them to his clients by focusing on the fact Hein Eek in Eindhoven. And it can also be eclectic
have breathed new life into a world once that the chairs are rustproof, and therefore solid and elegantly upcycled, as seen at the most stylish
condemned to the scrap heap, rediscovering and durable. But in terms of promoting the boutiques of New York and Paris.
its secrets and making it glorious again. Thanks industrial aesthetic, it was the Sundance Catalog Industrial style is constantly being revived
to their efforts, the classics of French industrial that featured Xavier Pauchards chair in 1995 and and reinvented. Decorative trends, says Vincent
design are now sought after and exported all pushed it to huge success: now some six thousand Grgoire from the Nelly Rodi design studio, are
over the world. Tolix chairs are sold in the US every year. rooted more strongly in the cultures of northern
dolls-house dresser
unknow n de sig ne r / 1 9 t h c e nt ur y
The practice of factory workers making small items for a personal touch that had been wiped out in a world in
their own personal use using company materials and which work was graded, sanitized and regulated down
equipment has existed for a long time. Such items are tothe very last detail.3
often known as side productions or homers. These small objects also reveal the skill of the
Although frequently tolerated, the misappropriation workers, their mastery of the trivial. The details of
of scraps was generally against regulations. Creating this piece of dolls-house furniture are also evidence
these items from raw materials was a mild form of fraud, of the thoroughness paid to the manufacturing process.
and required the silent collusion of skilled workers with The tiny hinged doors and drawer handles show the
their immediate superiors.1 In the evening they would same sophisticated techniques of stamping, riveting,
take out of their bag empty bottles, their dirty lunchbox, bending and turning of the metal used in full-sized
a newspaper, and sometimes scraps of metal that might furniture.
come in useful, trying to create items out of wrought As well as displaying its makers mastery of different
iron, or everyday objects with whatever came to hand.2 skills, every homer tells a story of humanity, rebellion,
These homers were the result of hard work, of complicity and regulations, and through its form
course, but not that imposed by the company, rather, of the evolution of style. Each is at the same time a
work that they carried out for themselves. This practice witness to a different period and a fragment of social
was something of a safeguard, reintroducing as it did and cultural history.
1 Bernard Clment explains this in a note on the practice in Les Schneider, Le Creusot: A family, a company, a city: 18361960, Muse dOrsay, Paris, 1995.
2 Martine Sonnet in Atelier 62.
3 Les Schneider, Le Creusot: A family, a company, a city: 18361960, Muse dOrsay, Paris, 1995.
factory locker
g a n t o i s / 19th cen tu r y
The health and safety laws of 1893 and 1903 made their a communal world. Thanks only to the presence of the I need smart men to search the lockers and find any Two manufacturing processes
indicate the creator of this locker
presence felt in France. The rattling of the padlock that padlock, they resisted the suspicion of an employer as communist propaganda material lying around in the
( J. Gantois & Beucher Furniture
secured the locker door accompanied the transition well as the curiosity or greed of colleagues. pockets of the staff.2 Makers in Saint-Di-des-Vosges):
from private life to the professional sphere, and vice Under strict surveillance, lockers also became a A place where private life met hard work, lockers the punctured sheet metal (still one
versa. Internal compartments (soiled clothing had to be symbol of social struggle; those punched with a number played a full part in the story of the lives of workers, so of the specialities of this company),
kept separate), hangers and hooks housed the workers or sporting a label allowed supervisors to quickly identify much so that they gave rise to a number of expressions, and the upper cornice made from
personal and professional items; they shed their skin any workers who returned outside permitted hours: many of which are still in use: a worker fired from the rolled sheet metal fitted with a
wooden tube.
every morning and evening. representatives at ironworks demanded one locker per factory was asked to take his locker, while striking
At first made from wood, then from metal (initially person... They were well aware that the labelling was workers proclaimed their displeasure by returning to
with grated fronts that later became solid), lockers can intended to facilitate the work of the supervisor during the lockers.
be seen as the first social piece of furniture. Modern her rounds, when she might catch someone who should
lockers do not hold the same secrets as those of the past: not have been there. Because whatever the blacksmiths
odds and ends made in secret during working hours, aspired to, it was to be left in peace at their lockers.1
mattresses for sleeping on, small souvenirs and treasured They were a place of confrontation between workers 1 Martine Sonnet, Atelier 62.
personal items, trade union leaflets and even children and employers. At Renault, in the early 1930s, the staff 2 Saint Loup, Renault de Billancourt.
that could not be looked after elsewhere. These lockers manager announced his intention to Louis Renault to
were a private space in the workplace, a sacred enclave in replace all the locker supervisors.
strongbox
u n k n o w n des i gn er / 19th c entury
It all began in England, with an impregnable lock. designs, with their iron cladding, wrought-iron keys
In 1784 Joseph Bramah patented a mechanism that and long nails and their invisible locking mechanism,
was impossible to force, and founded the Bramah along with customized decorative motifs in brass
Locks Company. An American locksmith, Alfred C. (strongboxes containing pharmaceutical items, for
Hobbs, succeeded in opening it and in turn began to example, sported a caduceus).
manufacture strongboxes. As for the armour plating, With a shape that is often encountered in the plots
this we owe in large part to two British brothers, Charles dreamed up by Arthur Conan Doyle and in other fictional
and Jeremiah Chubb, who invented it in 1835. Ten years tales from the 19thcentury, the strongbox is perhaps
earlier, in France, a certain Alexandre Fichet had opened the most iconic piece of furniture of the Industrial
a locksmith shop in Paris. Revolution. During this period of fierce economic
Having been restored, this heavy piece of furniture competition, it soon became indispensable, holding as it
(weighing approximately 100 kg, or 220 lb) still fulfils its did the cash, patents and valuable papers that guaranteed
function and fits in perfectly with the industrial trend. a companys survival. The fact that it was fireproof, one
The fact that ships strongboxes have become particularly of the major selling points of industrial furniture, also
sought-after items is probably owed to their striking served to increase its sales.
voltaire chair
gr a s sin- bale d ans / late 19th ce ntury
One particular example bears witness to its success: end clientele, both in France itself and abroad. Pieces in
on 15 September 1874, following his election to office, the Napoleon III, Art Nouveau and Art Deco styles won
Marchal de Mac-Mahon (180893), President of the prizes at the universal exhibitions in Paris, London and
Republic of France, came in person to visit the factory Brussels. They were exported to Great Britain and the
belonging to this great French industrialist. United States, and even to Australia and Asia.
The pages of the Grassin-Baledans catalogue,
supplier to the State and the principal cities of France,
including Paris, included gates, items for the farm,
garden or stable, glasshouses, verandas, bridges, The design pictured here is a detail
walkways, kiosks and staircases, as well as twenty pieces of the so-called Dutch chair, no.
of garden furniture. Plant pots, tables, chairs, benches, 1 This term refers to a semi-hollow, oblong-shaped extruded steel tubing. 17, Voltaire model, measuring
stools and footrests are recognizable by their lions-paw 2 Such as Carr (Paris), Guillot Pelletier and Jouffray (Orlans) and Blod- 103cm (401 2in.) high and 68cm
or horses-hoof feet, in fact an extremely practical novelty Galland (Tournus). (263 4in.) wide, with a seat height
3 Located near the front line, the company struggled to market a style of of 37cm (145 8in.). A version with
as this broad base prevented the furniture from sinking furniture that was considered old-fashioned after the two world wars, and
a swivel base was also produced.
into the soil. began to concentrate on metal for the building trade. Taken over by ric
Original catalogue price: painted
Bout (president of Frances metal construction union from 1979 to 1983) in
The refined and robust not to mention expensive the 1970s, it won a contract for building cinemas for the Iraqi army. Conflict wicker 27 francs; painted
manufacturing of this furniture intended it for high- put an end to the contract and to this hundred-year-old firm. white 29 francs.
1 The Scherf bookcase won awards at the Salons in Brussels (1888) and
Paris (Scherf was the recipient of a silver medal in 1885, 1894, 1895,
1896 and 1900, and a bronze medal in 1889).
2 Listed in the Annuaire de lAssociation des inventeurs et artistes industriels
(France) in 1889 as SCHERF, manufacturer of iron rails, 36 rue des
Acacias, Paris.
diffuser-shade light
h ol oph ane / 1 8 9 3
The story of this system of industrial lighting, Holophane Ltd was formed in Great Britain (for a time,
designed more than a century ago, is also the story the term holophane was used generically to describe
of the Holophane Company. any diffuser lamp), while the United States was home to
In the late 19th century, daylight and gas lamps Holophane Inc. The French branch, the Socit Anonyme
were no longer sufficient to provide light for workers Holophane, was founded in 1920.
in factories and workshops in the early morning and at The prismatic glass was suitable for all types of
dusk. The advent of electricity soon saw the hanging of mounts, allowing the system to be adapted for all
metal plates fixed to ceilings and walls, but they fulfilled possible uses: both indoors and outdoors, for display-
their function too well and dazzled the workers. case spotlights, lamps, chandeliers and street lighting.
It was Frenchman Antoine Blondel who first came Holophane soon equipped factories and workshops,
up with the idea for prismatic glass in 1893. A professor warehouses and gymnasiums, exhibition halls and
of electricity at the French National School of Bridges entertainment venues, stations and schools.
and Roads, Blondel patented a new round lamp which The Second World War slowed the growth of the
he called a Holophane, from the Greek words holos, firm, and its various branches met with different fates.
whole, and phanos, light. The different sides of his Holophane France is now the worlds leading supplier
transparent glass lamp harnessed and channelled the of car headlamp glass, while Holophane US is proud
light much more efficiently. of its position as the worlds leading lighting supplier.
The rights to the patent were purchased by the
American Otis A. Mygatt in 1896. The company
brilli clock
b ril l i f r r es w or ks hop / 1900
A monumental clock on the factory faade, pitiless expertise; the workshop of Brilli Frres adapted its
timekeeper with its impetuous chimes: the age of clocks to run on electricity, making them infallible and
streamlining and the regulation of tasks had sounded. impregnable. Countless factories, stations and schools in
Discipline and punctuality were no longer enough. The France and abroad adopted them. In a catalogue dating
theories of the American engineer Frederick Winslow from the 1920s, the Brilli Frres workshop listed the
Taylor (18561915) had been widely picked up on; designs on which its reputation was founded: free-
time was now counted and time regulated industry. standing clocks, timekeeping systems, automatic calls
The rhythm of the clock dictated the rhythm of actions and rings, staff entry recorders, building clocks, bells and
repeated throughout the day with mechanical regularity. chimes, synchronization of all timekeeping equipment,
The machines cost money, they had to run. Their alarm clocks, rounds monitor, and chronographs.
movement was regular; work had to be as well.1
In 1898, Charles Vigreux and Lucien Brilli formed
a company manufacturing mechanical and electrical
equipment in Levallois-Perret. The latter, assisted by
his brother Henri, wasted no time in developing specific 1 Alain Dewerpe, Histoire du travail, Paris, 2001.
ravel revolving
postcard rack
lo uis- d id ie r d e s gacho ns / c. 19 0 0
1 In June 1927, Didier des Gachons went into partnership with one of his
associates, Andr Ren Ravel, forming the company Didier des Gachons
and Ravel. See Didier Teissonnire, La Lampe Gras, Paris, 2008.
handling and
storage boxes
s u r oy fr re s / 1902
1 As well as handling materials for the textile industry and trolleys for collecting cloth or waste, the company, based in Loos
in northern France, also developed textiles for hospital use and rubber containers for the automotive industry. Despite a
diversification policy over the long term, Suroy closed in 2004 amid the severe crisis affecting the textile industry.
galvanized-steel bucket
t abl isse m e nt s x . pauc h ar d / 1 9 0 7
Jugs, coal scuttles, pots, pans, clothes boilers, tubs, of land far from prying eyes, Xavier Pauchard carried
waste bins, watering cans, feeding and water troughs, out experiments in the bottom of old pots. Neither the
weathervanes, railings and stakes: from the late 19th harsh climate nor successive failures, nor even the onset
century the invention of sheet steel and galvanization of poisoning, could stop him: he went on to master
gave rise to a whole range of items for cooking, cleaning, galvanized steel. Whether used for everyday items or
the home, the garden, looking after livestock and for outdoor furniture, galvanization owes its pedigree
agricultural production. to Pouchards tenacity.
It was several decades before this process, which A page had turned: galvanization opened up
had been invented on the other side of the Atlantic, new horizons for working with steel. Sheet metal
was industrialized in France. A young zinc worker manufacturers soon took over from artisanal metal
from Frances Morvan region, Xavier Pauchard, the son workers. Zinc never ceased to be reborn; and so, in a
and grandson of an itinerant roofer and zinc worker, somewhat paradoxical fashion, this rustproof metal
developed an interest in 1907. In order to perfect his saw Tolix chairs move from the garden into the home
knowledge and to develop new uses, he ordered a in the 1990s. Its attractive metal appearance, originally
generously illustrated book on the subject conceived to provide protection against rust,
from the United States. Setting created a new aesthetic. Industrial style
up on an abandoned plot had found its signature.
Measuring 31cm
(121 4in.) in diameter,
35cm (133 4in.) high,
having 56 rivets,
weighing 4.6kg (10.2lb)
when empty, up to
23.7kg (52.2lb) when
full, with a capacity of
18 litres (4 gallons),
this bucket is an
almost archaeological
illustration of three
components of
industrial furniture:
sheet metal,
rustproofing (zinc)
and assembly
technique (rivets).
dugdill lamp
j oh n dug dill / 1 9 0 7
With a look that is at the same time ancient and avant- United States before 1939, all intended to improve the
garde, these lamps have escaped from the refined performance of his lamp. The details of its industrial
atmosphere of collectors cabinets and are finding their manufacture are still unknown; Dugdill & Co. Ltd was
way into stylish modern homes. Similar workshop lamps probably founded around 1930.
were manufactured by O.C. White (1883) in America, by Examples manufactured before the 1940s are found
Midgard in Germany, by Gras in France and by Dugdill on the market in both Britain and the United States.
in England (1907). The design of this last is attributed to This large brass lamp, with a height of 96cm (3734in.)
John Dugdill, an electrical engineer from Manchester, and a base measuring 10.5cm (418in.) in diameter,
who filed a patent for a rotating electrical switch in is Edwardian in style although its ornamentation was
1906. In 1907 the magazine The Electrical Review mentioned simplified over the years; the model has adjustable arms
an invention that improved the coupling pin of working made from steel tubing, giving it a style that is pure
lamps, stopping them from unscrewing themselves and and clean. Over the course of its evolution, the Dugdill
working loose. lamp lost its rows of iconic beads, although these were
John Dugdill was a prolific inventor and filed a emulated by its American counterpart.
succession of technical patents in both Britain and the
textile
factory
furniture
sing e r / c. 1910
triplex lamp
j oh an pe t t e r j oh ansson / 1 9 1 9 / r e issue d by m a ck a p r
inspection lamp
u n k n o w n des i gn er / c. 1920 / still in pro d uctio n
Metal kitchen units began to appear at the end of the metal reservoir for flour that was adjustable and could
First World War. The 1918 Spanish Flu epidemic left contain more than 20kg (44lb); housewives used them
thirty million victims in its wake worldwide; hygiene and by operating a built-in sieve. A sugar container and a
health became the new battleground of governments in bread drawer were also made of sheet metal to preserve
countries weakened by war and disease. This was the era the foodstuffs. The Hoosier Cabinet had a number of
of the sanitary kitchen, of porcelain, enamelled surfaces tricks (including a spice rack and turntables). Its success
and bare floors (linoleum gained ground on floor tiles); was such that in the early 20th century the majority
everything had to be non-perishable and easy to clean, of American homes had a Hoosier: the name became
or rather to disinfect. White and lighter-coloured shades generic and was used to refer both to Hoosier products
established themselves as symbols of purity and health. and to those of its competitors.
A hygienic alternative to the pantries of days gone by, In the 1920s and 1930s, such firms as Whitehead,
which were poorly equipped to resist rodents, maggots, Servel, Elgin and De Dietrich continued to use sheet
weevils, damp or heat, metal units were resistant to metal, but then began to sell fitted kitchen units, often
vermin. Metal furniture makers also offered tables, equipped with an electric refrigerator. Free-standing
sideboards and storage cabinets to match. cabinets, made from sheet metal or lined with tin,
In the United States, the Indiana-based Hoosier gradually disappeared.
Manufacturing Company came up with the idea in 1898
of equipping a traditional pantry cupboard to turn it into 1 Nancy R. Hiller, The Hoosier Cabinet in Kitchen History, Bloomington,
a proper pastry-making unit.1 These were fitted with a IN, 2009.
homemade lamp
u n kno wn d e sig ne r / c. 192040
bienaise chair
n e l s o n b r other s / 1921
multipls chairs
and table
Frequently confused with the Model
A chair by Xavier Pauchard (the two
models competed on the market
during the interwar period), the
j o s e p h ma thi eu / 1922 Multipls chair can be recognized
by the concave shape of its legs.
The origin of the chair is as complex as a game of The originality of its design led the organizers of the
Meccano; twenty pieces of stamped sheet steel were 1928 Stuttgart exhibition to shortlist the chair alongside
shaped and assembled (including eight pieces for the creations from designers such as Marcel Breuer, Ludwig
seat, four for the legs and five for the backrest). Mies van der Rohe and Mart Stam. In 1969, three
Sheet metal soon became popular with Multipls chairs received a supreme accolade when they
both commercial and individual clients, but its appeared in the painting Ossie Clark and Peter Schlesinger at
manufactureremained artisanal. The multiple die- Le Parc des Sources, Vichy by David Hockney. Making them
stamped pieces that made up the chair and the the focal point of this work, Hockney invites the viewer
considerable amount of welding involved made its to take a seat on the single chair that is left empty for this
production even harder to mechanize. very purpose.
tolix model a
chair
x av ie r pauc h ar d / 1 9 2 5
Over the course of the trials carried out in Xavier ridging was what made the chair stackable, but in fact,
Pauchards workshops in Autun, a prototype was this improvement was intended to make the legs, which
perfected in the 1920s. It was a significant moment; the were prone to buckling, more rigid a problem that the
appearance of the chair designed by this Burgundian Lyon-based company Multipls was unable to overcome.
craftsman marked a turning point, and its influence For more than a half century, Tolix furniture was
would prove to be long-lasting. By relying on his rarely marked with the company name. Exceptions
faultless mastery of material and technique, Xavier include the chairs made for the luxury liner SS Normandie,
Pauchard succeeded where, according to Serge Lemoine, which are identifiable thanks to the round label affixed to
the key exponents of Bauhaus had failed.1 Rationalism, the reverse of the backrest, bearing the inscription Les
functionality and aesthetics are combined in a chair, siges mtalliques Tolix Autun. When Chantal Andriot
which, unlike its predecessors, could be mass-produced. took over the reins at Tolix in 2004, she added clear
Its production process anticipated the one-piece branding to every item that leaves the workshops.
concept that would become the norm with the advent of
moulded plastic.
The earliest examples did not yet have ridged legs, 1 Former president of the Muse dOrsay in Paris; quoted in Brigitte
which were fitted with steel runners. Some thought the Durieux, Inoxydable Tolix, Paris, 2008.
flambo chair
h e n ri l i b er / 1926
The typists chair was invented in the United States right competitors, including designs produced in Germany.
at the end of the 19th century, thirty years after the birth The company flourished; under the Nazi occupation
of the typewriter. The Flambo chair did not arrive in the workshop at Fontenay-sous-Bois was abandoned
France until the interwar period. This height-adjustable in favour of Nogent-le-Roi, after which a finishing and
swivel chair owes its originality to a hairpin spring, storage centre was set up in Saint-Denis in the early
the invention of a man called Henri Liber, nicknamed 1960s. Flambo numbered 1,000 or so employees when,
Monsieur Flambo after he created a small light that lit in 1968, Michel, the son of Henri Liber, became head
up when turned. The Socit Flambo was formed in 1919. of a factory in Vierzon, bringing some 700 employees
Trained in industrial design, in 1926 Henri Liber began with him. But crisis was to come, two decades later; the
to sell a chair that became an important addition to his company went into liquidation in 1986.
range of office supplies, which included Papic drawing
pins, still available today.1 He also devised the Roule-
Dactyle system, consisting of chairs that rolled along
rails in front of desks and storage cabinets.
Henri Liber continued to improve the ergonomics
of his chair; in 1927 a coiled spring allowed the backrest
to rock, and he supplemented it with a foam rubber
cushion. The Flambo M42 chair was born.
The French manufacturer proudly displayed
his furniture in the French Office pavilion at the
International Exhibition in Paris in 1937, proving
that French production was worth its salt in terms of
ingenuity and strength when compared to its foreign 1 See Yolande Amic, LEmpire du bureau 19002000, Paris, 1984.
Rajouter 5 mm de matire
pour fond perdu
rono table
ro n o / c. 1927
galaxie floodlight
soc i t f r an aise d c l air ag e g al / 1 9 2 8
In the
1950s, Longeau
(Amiens) was the
largest rail yard in Europe. Some
300 railway workers were employed at
its shunting stations. Mechanics, train drivers,
brakemen, banksmen, lamplighters and pointsmen
dealt with thousands of tons of freight from booming
post-war France. For a long time prior to that, lamps
and candles had no longer been enough to guarantee the
productivity and safety of those carrying out night-time
work. So the French rail company SNCF turned to its
supplier, the lighting company GAL,1 and the Galaxie
floodlight was born. Encouraged by trials carried out at
their central laboratory at Saint-Ouen, the SNCF building
fixtures department approved a design. The body, made
from thick sheet steel and weighing 32kg (70lb), and
an ultrapure aluminium mirror were carried by a steel
stirrup that pivoted and swung on a moulded cast-
This floodlight measures 100cm
(393 8in.) in diameter and is fitted
iron base. Additionally it incorporated the astonishing
with a 1,000-watt mercury vapour 100-cm-long (3938in.) reflector shade that was mounted
lamp creating a narrow but far- on pylons, 20 m (65 ft 6 in.) high.
reaching beam, perfect for use on
railways. Its brightness is linked
not to the wattage of the bulb but
to the geometric properties of the
parabolic curves. SNCF installed
this light along the tracks in groups 1 The Socit Franaise dclairage, GAL, formed in Courbevoie in the 1930s,
of between two and sixteen. was taken over by Bruneau Charnay in 2002.
Making space profitable, putting as many drinks as apart, but matched each other comfortably. The pedestal
possible on the tables and optimizing the back-and- tables edged top could accommodate four glasses of
forth journeys of the waiters: turning caf terraces into beer and their mats, four coffees, plus an ashtray and bill
profitable businesses was the Pauchard family credo. saucer. The cast-iron base was hidden under the table;
And for good reason; brewers were demanding clients the chairs were stackable; and caf terraces suddenly
and they represented the largest share of the Pauchards
became a lot more profitable!
turnover. The profit generated enabled the company to
Jean Pauchard, head of the Tolix Company that was
finance its own equipment: The truckloads of thousands
founded in 1954, six years after the death of his father,
of chairs that left the factory for the La Comte brewery
in Chlons-sur-Marne allowed us to purchase the metal- was the designer of the A56 chair, which is still on sale
bending machine. today. Twenty-five of these could be stacked together and
Father and son continued to perfect their designs, still measure less than 2.3 m (7 ft 6in.) in height. This
with varying degrees of success. This was the case chair was created in response to remarks made by caf
with two of Xavier Pauchards early creations: the owners about the Tolix Model C and D chairs, which
non-stackable Model B and Model E chairs, or the they thought were too bulky, reducing the space for
hastily issued Model G table, which was described as tables and resulting in a drop in customers. I just
capable of being taken apart and reassembled but in added an extra backrest section to the Model A chair,
reality was impossible to stack owing to its weight. and, as it was 1956, I named it the A56.
The two manufacturers kept an eye on the competition British design guru Terence Conran had long been
by listening to the feedback delivered by their an admirer of Xavier Pauchards Model A chair, believing
representatives at a meeting held every season at the
it to be such a perfect creation that he assumed it was
factory in Autun.
an American design like the aluminium Navy Chair.1
Unlike its primary competitor, Multipls, which
He spotted Jean Pauchards A56 chair and sold it in his
reissued the same design over and over again, the Tolix
brand produced a growing range of chairs and tables, Habitat stores. This was a milestone for the brand as
allowing its customers to choose from the catalogue the iconic chair was then adopted the world over.
according to their requirements and constraints,
whether financial or aesthetic.
Over time, different shapes came together: the
Model 9 pedestal table by Xavier Pauchard and the A56
chairs by his son Jean were designed twenty-five years 1 Brigitte Durieux, Inoxydable Tolix, Paris, 2008, p.53.
mappemonde
architects table
unk now n de sig ne r / c . 1 9 3 0
The 1932 advertising for the Mappemonde boasted practices the drafting of plans and drawings demanded
that it was a super design table and the only hinge- increasing levels of accuracy and required inclined
mounted one available, allowing it to be used in any drafting tables and height-adjustable trestles. In the early
position and to be simply and efficiently manoeuvred 1930s, the Mappemonde responded to the demands of a
in an astonishing way. It is stable, thanks to its clamp growing market.
handle, telescopic and no more expensive than any other This table was the heir to a tradition that began
architects table. In design studios and architectural in the 17th century with the transforming furniture
tous sens
bracketlamp
u n k n o w n des i gn er / c . 1930
nicolle stool
t a b l i s semen ts n i colle / 1933
From 1913, tablissements Nicolle, based in Montreuil, In 1954 tablissements Nicolle designed two
specialized in the manufacture of washers. They had a different models of stool with adjustable screws: the
stamping and punching workshop in which they designed 45/60 and the 60/80.
the Nicolle stool for their own use and for that of some of In the early 1960s the company was sold to an
their neighbouring factories in 1933. It had three stamped American group and the former foreman, Pierre
metal legs and a seat in the shape of a large washer. Maurice Flix, started his own business. He resumed the
Soon afterwards they added a backrest, which was manufacture of the Nicolle stool, the marketing of which
compared after the war to the tail of a whale. The stool was entrusted to Manutan. The dominance of Nicolle
later became stackable and a fourth leg was added to stools within French industry then continued. The all-
increase its stability. Soon it was bought and used in metal designs were fitted with flat cork seats, and later
factories all over France. It was available in eight different also with wooden seats. However, a new law, requiring
heights, ranging from 45cm (1734in.) to 80cm (3112in.), that swivel seats used for working at machinery should
making it suitable for use with many different kinds have five-legged bases, signalled the death of the
of machinery. Nicolle stool.
anglepoise lamp
ge o rge carward ine / 1934
From an industrial region of England to the rue du workshops at the Maison Herms; their ergonomics
Faubourg-Saint-Honor in Paris, the success story responded perfectly to the requirements of this world in
of this jointed lamp is stitched in linen thread. which accuracy and the quality of each movement were
The British industrialist George Carwardine essential. The Anglepoise was fitted with a shade that
(18871948), who designed vehicle suspension systems, allowed the beam of light to be concentrated on precise
invented an extendible spring in 1932 and came up with points without causing glare; and without consuming
the idea of using it for a jointed lamp. Inspired by the too much energy, it lit the inside of bags, luggage and
movements of the human arm, this lamp was mounted briefcases as well as the work of goldsmiths.
on to tubes on which four of the famous springs allowed Legend has it that a craftsman who was concerned
it to hold its position. The first version of the Anglepoise about damaging the leather on which he was working,
lamp was issued in 1934. had the idea of upholstering the cast-iron base of the
From 1955 onwards, Anglepoise lamps and lamp. Robert Dumas-Herms (18981978), who was
Gras lamps were installed on the workbenches of the running the firm at the time, noticed this leather cover
Supprimer le gris
la mouette childrens
furniture
x a v i e r p a u c ha r d / 1935
luxo lamp
j ac ob j ac obse n / 1 9 3 8
With sales of more than twenty-five million, the Luxo The timeless lines of the Luxo have inspired some
lamp, still in production and now on display at MoMA in of the worlds greatest designers. In 1971, Gaetano
New York, shows no signs of disappearing. Pesce gave it a stature consistent with its status as a
The Norwegian engineer Jacob Jacobsen (190196), giant of design by creating the Moloch Floor Lamp,
an importer of machine tools for the textile industry, manufactured by Bracciodiferro and reaching an amazing
was given an Anglepoise 1227 lamp in 1936. Struck by 2.86 m (9 ft 4 in.) in height. In 2011 the German designer
the objects design and ingenuity, he bought a licence to Stefan Geisbauer created a two-dimensional tribute to the
manufacture it in Scandinavia and then redesigned it by lamp for Ingo Maurer GmbH; the Looksoflat Lamp is a
simplifying its forms. Made in Oslo, the Luxo L-1, named flattened but functional version of Luxo, fitted with LEDs.
from a Latin word meaning giver of light, was officially The only thing Luxo lacked was the ability to speak.
released in 1938. Soon it was being used in schools, Although he stopped short of making it talk, animator
offices, industrial workshops, healthcare facilities, and John Lasseter took inspiration from his own desk lamp
design and architects studios, until it completely took and turned a minature version of it into the star of one
over from the Anglepoise. In the 1940s it was the most of the earliest computer-generated cartoons, Luxo Jr.,
commonplace working lamp in both Europe and the created with the agreement of Jacob Jacobsen. The
United States. character of Luxo Jr went on to become the logo of
In the 1960s the Italian firm Naska Loris seems to Pixar Studios.1
have been the recipient of a distribution licence for the
Luxo; a number of these models are often found in the
hands of antiquarians. The Italian company Fontana Arte 1 In 2009, Luxo tried to sue Pixar-Disney for producing and selling lamps in
the likeness of Luxo Jr without having obtained authorization to do so. Both
acquired Naska Loris in 1996 and in turn marketed the parties reached an agreement: Luxo Jr would remain as the Pixar logo but
lamp under the name Naska. they would stop selling the lamps.
health chair
t h e iro n r i te i r on er c o. / 193 8
levallois lamp
so ci t ano nyme r.g . / c. 1 9 4 0
envoy line
school desk
am e r ic an se at ing / 1 9 4 1
The recent vogue for vintage furniture has brought Furniture. It quickly became a force to be reckoned with
this chair back into the public eye. Beautiful, cleverly on the international market for school furniture, which it
designed and with a timeless charm, the Envoy Line still dominates today.
school desk goes straight to the top of the class. The Envoy Line series was designed in 1941
The American Seating Company celebrated its 125th and based on a technological innovation that was
anniversary in 2011. The millions of seats sold by AS have unprecedented in this field: one-piece steel construction.
equipped amphitheatres, cafeterias, auditoriums, public The base, sides and back upright are in fact one single
places (including New Yorks Madison Square Garden) piece; the wooden backrest and seat are then added
and classrooms. Schools were the first to take advantage afterwards. The lower bar of the backrest swivels
of the furniture produced by this firm, founded in 1886 to accommodate the angle of a childs back. This
in Michigan under the name Grand Rapids School lightweight piece of furniture is available in four sizes,
ranging from 28cm (11in.) to 45cm (1734in.) in height What makes the Envoy Line desk successful, in the
for the chair, and three sizes for the version including a past as well as now, is its famous streamlined style that
small desk top, from 33cm (13in.) in height upwards, was so dear to designers of the 1930s and 1940s: a pared-
with open or enclosed casing. Adjustable in height, down, aerodynamic profile often associated with boats,
thedesk version also includes a bookshelf under the cars and aeroplanes.
seat.Not only ergonomic, it also had an educational At the Design for Kids auction held by Pierre Berg
impact: the double-seat desks and then separate tables and Associates in Brussels in December 2010, an Envoy
and chairs that would later predominate were still Line desk in plywood and light-brown painted steel from
far away. 1941 was sold for 250.
navy chair
e m e c o / 1944
Finir lombre
blocmtal
chair
r e n m al av al / 1 9 4 5
In post-war France, a craftsman came up with the idea the diversification of production. Private customers fell
of recovering munitions factory waste, specifically the in love with stylized garden furniture and small pedestal
long strips of metal in which bullet caps were produced. tables, such as the Rigitulle range by Mathieu Margot.
From 1945 Ren Malaval, a professional welder,1 used The same year Blocmtal won a tender with the city
this scrap to manufacture urban outdoor furniture. of Marseille to manufacture hundreds of public waste
Welded and passed through a rolling device that he had bins.These punched green bins soon spread across the
developed, the strips were then hit into shape with a whole of France. The Malaval family also designed other
mallet and placed on wrought-iron U-shaped bases; in products intended for mass distribution, as well as a
this way Ren Malavals bench was born. Some of the childrens line that is now highly sought-after.
earliest examples were purchased by the Grotto A new factory was set up in the Lourdes suburbs
of Lourdes in 1953, and are still in use. in 1968. The manufacturing process was entirely
Chairs and tables were sold to local cafs and overhauled; bullet caps were now made from plastic,
restaurants. The traditional manufacturing process so Gilbert Malaval was obliged to purchase sheet metal
made each piece of furniture unique, a feature that now and have it punched himself.
makes them particularly popular with collectors.
On the death of Ren Malaval in 1957, his son Gilbert
took over the company during Frances thirty years of 1 Originally from Albi and a journeyman member of the historic French
artisan organization known as the Compagnons du Tour de France,
post-war economic growth. Costs and logistics were Ren Malaval also took part in the construction of the first pipeline
optimized through the simplification of the designs and between Algeria and France.
mullca 510
chair Made of chrome and
copper, the tubing can
display a whole range
g a s t o n ca va i llon / 1947 of tones to match the
colours of the leather
selected.
A chair designed between the wars, and on which The chair was officially selected to be supplied to
millions of school children sat for many decades, every school in France; millions were produced. In spite
discovered a vocation on the picket line in 1968. It then of itself the 510 was mixed up in the events that shook
fell from favour before being reborn in a more modern France in 1968; it was immortalized in the magazine
guise, upholstered in leather. Paris Match, with the employees of Sud-Aviation, the first
Gustave Cavaillon, commercial director of the factory to down tools and close its doors.2 The protesting
Parisian Furnishing Company (one of the manufacturers students even went so far as to use it as a projectile.
that supplied furniture to the state), formed the Mullca In 1985 Terence Conran brought it to Habitat, in a
company in 1947.1 France was then right in the middle very chic glossy black. Having left the classroom, it would
of its reconstruction phase; it needed to produce quickly come back under the spotlight in 2007, when a Parisian
and in large quantities. Innovative, unbreakable, light design and architecture studio, Cigu, came up with the
and stackable, this chair offered two original features: idea of reviving the little Mullca 510 chair and re-covering
the curve of its legs was perfectly calculated so that the it with leather. Lafa began to manufacture it again at
backrest could not touch the walls of a classroom, and Aurillac. Sweet revenge for a chair that the Member of
the hollow of the seat forced schoolchildren, so it is said, Parliament Claudius-Petit had described in front of the
to sit upright. Over the years Gustave Cavaillon filed National Assembly, at its creation, as the ugliest chair in
many patents in order to improve this small seat. the world.3
esavian limited
desk and chair
j am e s l e onar d / 1 9 4 8
Formed in 1883, Esavian Limited was the brand feature a base similar to the compass base that would be
under which the ESA (Educational Supply Association), developed two or three years later by Jean Prouv. Esavian
the British leader in the school furniture market, sold its sold several versions of this small desk, measuring 73cm
products, including books, furniture, windows and other (2834in.) high, 40cm (1534in.) wide and 50cm (1958in.)
items. From 1917 it manufactured wooden sliding doors; deep, with either one or two seats and a choice of a
in the interwar period, this material was replaced with simple table top or a box top. The chair was made from
metal, and aluminium stepped into the spotlight. plywood, with a padded seat and backrest covered with
Was the designer James W. Leonard one of those Formica (often yellow) or vinyl.
working for Esavian? Undoubtedly yes.1 The desk and More than a million Leonard chairs were sold by
chair attributed to him appeared in early 1948 in the Esavian before 1965. Perhaps too reminiscent of the
magazine Domus. A high-pressure machine from the difficult post-war years, this furniture eventually fell into
United States was used to make their cast-aluminium disuse with the advent of plastic; it has now been given a
bases.2 Various designs for these pieces existed; they all new lease of life by collectors.
1 In 1974, the British Society of Industrial Artists and Designers announced the death of James W. Leonard, the head designer at Esavian.
2 A photograph of a classroom furnished with Leonards chairs taken in the United States in 1949 appears in the catalogue The Class Room, From
the 19th Century until the Present Day, by Thomas Mller and Romana Scheiner, published for The Classroom in the VS Museum exhibition.
sanfil
lamp
unk now n de sig ne r / 1 9 4 9
Unlike the electric cable of the Gras lamp (1921), of the joint prevents the wire from twisting. This had the
which was previously the bestseller, the Sanfils wire added advantage of allowing the shade to move from side
runs through its steel arms and wraps around the inside to side.
of the joint, giving the lamp its name (sans fils means The Sanfil lamp could be completely disassembled
without wires). In order to avoid any risk of stripping (the joints and the tubes of the arms could be separated);
the wire when turning the lamp, and any subsequent risk this was a precursor to the Jield lamp (1952), the arms of
of electrocution, its designer used a clever strategy: at which were directly set into the joint.
the end of the arm a half-turn locking of the movement
1 We know that in 1985 it was part of the Lumires, je pense vous exhibition, on the occasion of the office lighting
competition launched by the Minister of Culture, Jack Lang, in order to boost French industrial design.
steel cranes
j o u s t ra / c. 1950
flexi-tube chair
l u c ie n illy / c. 1950
standard and
lac lamps
j e an-louis dom e c q / f r om 1 9 5 0
In Saint-Priest in the Rhne region of France, Jean- requirements, it was soon found on every workbench,
Louis Domecq designed the Standard in 1950 in order machine tool and architects table. Forty years after
to optimize the lighting of his mechanics workshop; it its invention, the fact that Terence Conran chose it for
was the only lamp with circular joints according to an the Habitat catalogue also added to its reputation; by
advertisement of the time. In fact, it functioned without featuring it in his catalogue he made it sacred, and the
any visible wires thanks to electrical contacts located lamp spearheaded the craze for industrial style. When
within the joints. The invention became a huge success Philippe Blier purchased the firm in 2002, he renamed
and its designer called his brand Jield, a name made up it Loft and created the Signal lamp, a version of the
from his initials, J. L. D. Standard that was two-thirds of the original size and
With its zigzag shape, spherical and adjustable came in a range of different colours.
head, and revolutionary ergonomics, the Jield Standard The success of the Standard led to its younger sister
genuinely set a new standard for desk lamps. With two, being almost entirely forgotten; the LAC was a covered
three, four or even five arms, depending on the users lamp designed in 1969 and reissued in 2011. With
hexagonal arms, a shade with cut-out sides and, most
importantly, clever technology, it was directly inspired
Posing side by side: the Standard
by the Standard. The LAC (sold from 1970 to 1990) did
and the LAC, the two lamps
designed by Jean-Louis Domecq. not achieve the levels of success expected of it, as its
In the late 1960s, he completed production costs resulted in too high a selling price. It
his companys range by acquiring did, however, inspire Marie-Franoise Domecq, Jean-
another Lyonnais brand, ADHER, Louiss daughter, to design the NOX, a swinging version
which manufactured flexible of which only 400 were made.
workshop and office lamps. This
With joints cast in Saint-Priest, a shade made in
strategy paid off; its expanded Standardlamp:
range allowed Jield to fulfil all the private collection. the Lyons area and plastic components manufactured
lighting needs of contemporary LAC lamp: Franois in Oyonnax, everything in the Domecq workshop is still
professionals. Vincent, Dijon. made in France, just as it always was.
bienaise desk
and chair set
a ttribute d to ro g e r blanc / 1956
A single example of this combined desk and chair set sorting offices and has two particular features. First,this
has surfaced to date. In the absence of any information piece of furniture is a one-piece the desk and seat are
about its origin, we can assume that it was produced on secured to a frame of bent and welded tubing. Second,
commission. This curious object marks a milestone in the entire set is mobile, able to move backwards and
the search for comfort undertaken by Bienaise with its forwards; on one side on a rail fixed onthe ground along
arched chair. a wall, and on the other on two fixedcasters, on the same
Its design is reminiscent of furniture made during principle as a rolling libraryladder.1
the 1950s for consultation rooms in libraries or postal
1 The same system is used for the Flambo typists chair (see page 114).
2 tablissements Bienaise closed in 1961. Roger Blanc went on to invest
in a furniture company in Provence.
flap desk
j e a n p a u cha r d / 1956
lumina lamp
m ax w il d / c . 1 9 6 0
Max Wild was a man of genius. He loved metal In order to make it suitable for a variety of
and understood how to transform it. His company workstations and the morphology of different machines,
manufactured bag clasps, and this led him to spend time the Lumina was available in several different designs.2
in clothing workshops. This was how he came to invent First came the Model 23, a simple shade mounted on
a gas-powered ironing machine that made the workers a rod, which, by means of a wooden screw, was fixed
tasks easier. Then, while he was at it, he also invented a directly on to the machine or table; then the Model
lamp that he named Lumina.1Lon Glasman certainly 23 20, a proper jointed lamp that was also telescopic.
knew his subject; he was the founder of Glasman This lamp had a twin, the Model AB lamp, which took its
& Compagnie, which supplied all the major textiles name from the initials of its manufacturer, Andr Bordas,
companies in France, including Dim in Autun and a sewing-machine technician who, with his sons, sold
Lejaby in Yssingeaux. The Lumina lamp is now sewing machines on rue Bonnet Boulanger and made
considered iconic, with its long steel legs and the curves lamps from subcontracted components assembled on
of its shade, and can be found in the shop windows of rue Louis-Braille.
industrial furniture dealers and at flea markets. Large numbers of these lamps ended up overseas,
It was the lamp of the textiles industry in France travelling as far as Africa and China, as a consequence
during the 1960s. Set up beside the sewing machine of company relocations and other difficulties within the
to direct light on to the needle, it responded well to French textile industry.
the demands of lingerie and clothing manufacturers.
Consisting of more than forty different elements, which
were probably outsourced to subcontractors, it was
1 Lon Glasman in conversation with the author.
assembled on the rue du Temple in Paris, the location 2 Fourni Catalogue, a wholesaler of machines for the textile and clothing
of Max Wilds shop, until around 1985. industry in the 1960s.
Rajouter 5mm
de matire
pour le fond perdu
model 103
flameproof lamp
m a p e l e c / 1960
SHOPS, MAKERS,
MARKETS AND
GALLERIES
....................................................
UK
.................................................... U K o nl i ne
Alfies Antique Market ....................................................
1325 Church Street Alexander & Pearl
Marylebone mail@alexanderandpearl.co.uk
London NW8 8DT
www.alexanderandpearl.co.uk
www.alfiesantiques.com ....................................................
....................................................
Brick Lane Market Bubbledrum
Brick Lane info@bubbledrum.co.uk
Shoreditch www.bubbledrum.co.uk
London E1 6PU ....................................................
www.visitbricklane.org In the Wood Shed
.................................................... inthewoodshed@me.com
LASSCO Brunswick House www.inthewoodshed.co.uk
30 Wandsworth Road
Vauxhall
London SW8 2LG
brunswick@lassco.co.uk
U SA
....................................................
www.lassco.co.uk
.................................................... Big Daddys Antiques
LASSCO Three Pigeons 3334 La Cienega Place
London Road Los Angeles, CA 90016
Milton Common bdantiques@gmail.com
Oxfordshire OX9 2JN www.bdantiques.com
3pigeons@lassco.co.uk .................................................... Obsolete
www.lassco.co.uk Big Daddys Antiques 222 Main Street
.................................................... Venice, CA 90291
1550 17th Street
The Old Cinema San Francisco, CA 94107 what@obsoleteinc.com
160 Chiswick High Road sfinfo@bdantiques.com www.obsoleteinc.com
London W4 1PR ....................................................
www.bdantiques.com
www.theoldcinema.co.uk .................................................... Urban Archaeology
.................................................... 143 Franklin Street
Old Spitalfields Market Factory 20 New York, NY 10013
16 Horner Square Abingdon, VA 24210
NYdowntown@urbanarchaeology.com
Spitalfields eric@factory20.com www.urbanarchaeology.com
London E1 6EW www.factory20.com ....................................................
info@oldspitalfieldsmarket.com ....................................................
The SHOP by H.Bleu
www.oldspitalfieldsmarket.com Hells Kitchen Flea Market 2124 Lincoln Boulevard
....................................................
West 39th Street & 9th Avenue Venice, CA 90291
Portobello Market New York, NY 10018 info@shophbleu.com
Portobello Road info@hellskitchenfleamarket.com www.shophbleu.com
London W10 5TD www.hellskitchenfleamarket.com ....................................................
www.portobelloroad.co.uk
....................................................
.................................................... Three Potato Four
Quirky Interiors Industry West 376 Shurs Lane, Building A
2604 Power Avenue, Suite 2 Philadelphia, PA 19128
Workshop in Harpenden, Hertfordshire;
Jacksonville, FL 32207 info@threepotatofourshop.com
visit by appointment
info@industry-west.com www.threepotatofourshop.com
james@quirkyinteriors.co.uk ....................................................
www.quirkyinteriors.co.uk www.industry-west.com
.................................................... .................................................... Vintage Industrial
Trainspotters Phoenix, Arizona
Junk Style
Unit 1, The Warehouse greg@retro.net or scott@retro.net
Linda Bradford, CID
Libbys Drive, Stroud www.shop.retro.net
Belmont Shore, Long Beach, CA 90803 ....................................................
Gloucestershire GL5 1RN cr.bradford@yahoo.com
info@trainspotters.co.uk ....................................................
V&M
www.trainspotters.co.uk V&M Corporate Office
.................................................... Modern 50 Artist Collective + Atelier 270 Lafayette Street
Vintage Industrial Furniture Paint Branch Park Suite 1400
Workshop in Ashbourne, Derbyshire; Maryland, MD 20783 New York, NY 10012
visit by appointment Dino@Modern50.com info@vandm.com
ken.wilkinson@w3z.co.uk www.Modern50.com www.vandm.com
www.vintageindustrialmetal.co.uk .................................................... ....................................................
Wo r l d wid e M us eums
.................................................... ....................................................
auckland paris a m s t e r da m
The Vitrine Persona Grata Stedelijk Museum
1a Grosvenor Street 38 rue Croix-des-Petits-Champs Paulus Potterstraat 13
Grey Lynn 75001 Paris, France 1071 CX Amsterdam
Auckland, New Zealand info@persona-grata.com The Netherlands
what@inthevitrine.com www.persona-grata.com www.stedelijk.nl
www.inthevitrine.com .................................................... ....................................................
.................................................... paris lon don
barcelona Persona Grata Design Museum
ARXE 71 Boulevard de Sbastopol 28 Shad Thames
Francesc Vila, 2 75002 Paris, France London SE1 2YD
08172 Sant Cugat del Valls info@persona-grata.com UK
Barcelona, Spain www.persona-grata.com www.designmuseum.org
info@arxe.info .................................................... ....................................................
www.arxe.info s t oc k h olm n e w y or k
.................................................... The Design House The Museum of Modern Art
m ad ri d Smalandsgatan 16 11 West 53 Street
El Teatro de los sueos 111 56 Stockholm, Sweden New York, NY 10019-5497
Calle Luis Muriel, 12 industrial premise norrmalmstorg@designhousestockholm.com USA
28002 Madrid, Spain www.designhousestockholm.com www.moma.org
xavier@elteatrodelossuenos.com .................................................... ....................................................
www.elteatrodelossuenos.com s w e de n on li n e paris
.................................................... Mitgard Centre Pompidou
m i lan Sweden Place Georges Pompidou
Spazio Rossana Orlandi info@midgard-licht.de 75191 Paris, France
Via Matteo Bandello 14/16 www.midgard-licht.de www.centrepompidou.fr
20123 Milan, Italy .................................................... ....................................................
marco.tabasso@rossanaorlandi.com s y dn e y paris
www.rossanaorlandi.com Treasurehouse Muse des Arts dcoratifs
.................................................... 7 Kyogle Place 107 rue de Rivoli
pari s Frenchs Forest NSW 2086 75001 Paris, France
Merci Sydney, Australia www.lesartsdecoratifs.fr
111 Boulevard Beaumarchais jbgmeyer@gmail.com ....................................................
75003 Paris, France www.treasurehouse.com.au weil am rhein
www.merci-merci.com ....................................................
Vitra Design Museum
.................................................... Charles-Eames-Strasse 1
D-79576 Weil am Rhein
Germany
www.design-museum.de
....................................................
FURTHER READING
Audoux, Marguerite, Marie Claires Workshop, translated by Frank Stewart Flint, Mller, Thomas and Scheiner, Romana, The Classroom: From the Late 19th
Chapman & Hall, 1920. CenturyUntil the Present Day, Ernst Wasmuth Verlag, 2010.
Bhm, Florian, editor, KGID (Konstantin Grcic Industrial Design), Phaidon Press, Ouvrage Collectif, New Home Furniture Design (Industrial Design), Instituto
2005. Mondade Ediciones, 2007.
Durieux, Brigitte, Inoxydable Tolix, ditions de la Martinire, 2008. Raisman, David, History of Modern Design (2nd Edition), Laurence King
Publishers, 2010.
Durieux, Brigitte, Le Mobilier industriel, ditions de la Martinire, 2009.
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acknowledgments
Brigitte Durieux
They opened their workshops to us, entrusted us with their archives and came
with us on our journey of discovery. Many thanks to the Industrial Five, whose
help and support has been so valuable to us: Gilles Oudin and Jrme Lepert
in Paris, Laurent Ardonceau and Bernard Mouiren in Isle-sur-la-Sorgue, and
Franois Vincent in Dijon.
They are the heirs to these objects and told us their history: many thanks to
Colette Malaval, Lucette Eysseric, Philippe Scherf, Christian and Jean-Louis
Blanc, Claire Illy, Anja Specht and Eric Thickett.
They lent us their treasures and told us their secrets: thanks to the Maison
Herms, Manuela (Tous Sens lamp), Emmanuel Jourgeaud (Midgard lamp),
Sonsofvintage (Navy chair), Balouga (Esavian desk), Isabelle Moulin (American
Seating desk), Numro 74 (Esavian chair), Jrme Delor (inspection lamps), Mr
Molina (Arras chair), ric Emeri (kitchen cabinets) and Carole Daprey.
They manufacture or reinterpret the icons of industrial design for todays
market: thanks to Chantal Andriot (Tolix), Anglepoise, Socit Cigu, Philippe
Blier (Jield), DCW Entreprises (Gras lamp), Mackapar (Triplex), Fontana Arte
(Luxo).
They exhibit these icons to best advantage: thanks to the Villa Noailles in
Hyres, and the Merci concept store in Paris.
Translated from the French Les Objets culte du mobilier industriel
They wrote this story with me: thanks to Dominique Balland, Evelyne Raisky,
by Laura Bennett
Philippe Magnen, Yannick Guillemin and Catherine Fornier.
Their books bring a passion for industrial design to the general public: thanks
First published in the United Kingdom in 2012 by
to ditions de La Martinire, especially to Anne Serroy, director of La Martinire
Thames & Hudson Ltd, 181a High Holborn,
Styles, and special thanks to Isabelle Parent, the most industrious of editors.
London wc1v 7qx
He used his talent to turn these objects into icons: thanks to Laziz Hamani
and also to Antoine Lippens, for this great partnership that was initiated by Original edition 2012 ditions de La Martinire, Paris
Grgoire Delziani. This edition 2012 Thames & Hudson Ltd, London
Laziz Hamani All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced
or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
My special thanks go to Brigitte Durieux, who has been a guide and an
including photocopy, recording or any other information storage and
inspiration to me, and has taken me on a journey into a new world that I love.
retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
I would also like to thank all the shop-owners, antiques dealers and collectors
who were kind enough to lend us their objects, no questions asked. It was British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
thanks to them that I learned the history of all of these objects; their passion A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
was infectious.
Special thanks to my assistant Antoine Lippens, whose skills allowed me to ISBN: 978-0-500-51663-8
take these images. They simply couldnt have existed without him. Thanks also
to 414 Pixel Mixer and their team who made the photographs look so good.
Printed and bound in Italy
Additional thanks to everyone else who worked on this book: Romuald Habert,
Pascal Gillet, Lucien Audibert, Lou Levy. To find out about all our publications, please visit www.thamesandhudson.com.
I dedicate this book to my children Yannis, Mathis and Noham, who always let There you can subscribe to our e-newsletter, browse or download our current
me discover the world in a new way, through their innocence. catalogue, and buy any titles that are in print.